A boy jumps from a wall 3m high. What is an estimate of the change in momentum of the boy when he lands without rebounding?

A. 5 N/s
B. 50 N/s
C. 500 N/s
D. 5000 N/s

The answer is C, but why?

1 Answer
Dec 10, 2017

See explanation.

Explanation:

It is not possible to give the answer as an exact number if the boy's mass is not given.

The boy's end velocity can be calculated using the energy preservation law:

E_k=E_p

The equation comes from the fact that all boy's initial potential energy is transferred to kinetic energy.

mgh=(mv^2)/2

v^2=2gh

v=sqrt(2gh)~~7,75

So the change in momentum is:

Deltap=7.75m

where m is the boy's mass.

Looking at the answers we find that if the mass is about 64.5kg then the answer would be C. Other answers require boy to be too heavy (640kg for answer D) or too light (6.4 kg for B or 0.64kg for A).

The second part (referring to answers A and B) comes from the fact that new born kids usually weigh about 4 kg, so a kid weighing 6.4 kg is in an age he usually can't walk or jump.