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Generalizing this result to N objects, we obtain

p 1 + p 2 + p 3 + + p N = constant j = 1 N p j = constant.

[link] is the definition of the total (or net) momentum of a system of N interacting objects, along with the statement that the total momentum of a system of objects is constant in time—or better, is conserved.

Conservation laws

If the value of a physical quantity is constant in time, we say that the quantity is conserved.

Requirements for momentum conservation

There is a complication, however. A system must meet two requirements for its momentum to be conserved:

  1. The mass of the system must remain constant during the interaction.
    As the objects interact (apply forces on each other), they may transfer mass from one to another; but any mass one object gains is balanced by the loss of that mass from another. The total mass of the system of objects, therefore, remains unchanged as time passes:
    [ d m d t ] system = 0 .
  2. The net external force on the system must be zero.
    As the objects collide, or explode, and move around, they exert forces on each other. However, all of these forces are internal to the system, and thus each of these internal forces is balanced by another internal force that is equal in magnitude and opposite in sign. As a result, the change in momentum caused by each internal force is cancelled by another momentum change that is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction. Therefore, internal forces cannot change the total momentum of a system because the changes sum to zero. However, if there is some external force that acts on all of the objects (gravity, for example, or friction), then this force changes the momentum of the system as a whole; that is to say, the momentum of the system is changed by the external force. Thus, for the momentum of the system to be conserved, we must have
    F e x t = 0 .

A system of objects that meets these two requirements is said to be a closed system    (also called an isolated system). Thus, the more compact way to express this is shown below.

Law of conservation of momentum

The total momentum of a closed system is conserved:

j = 1 N p j = constant.

This statement is called the Law of Conservation of Momentum    . Along with the conservation of energy, it is one of the foundations upon which all of physics stands. All our experimental evidence supports this statement: from the motions of galactic clusters to the quarks that make up the proton and the neutron, and at every scale in between. In a closed system, the total momentum never changes.

Note that there absolutely can be external forces acting on the system; but for the system’s momentum to remain constant, these external forces have to cancel, so that the net external force is zero. Billiard balls on a table all have a weight force acting on them, but the weights are balanced (canceled) by the normal forces, so there is no net force.

The meaning of ‘system’

A system    (mechanical) is the collection of objects in whose motion (kinematics and dynamics) you are interested. If you are analyzing the bounce of a ball on the ground, you are probably only interested in the motion of the ball, and not of Earth; thus, the ball is your system. If you are analyzing a car crash, the two cars together compose your system ( [link] ).

Practice Key Terms 3

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 1. OpenStax CNX. Sep 19, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12031/1.5
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