« Back to AP Physics Guide / Unit C4: Momentum (Mechanics) / Impulse Integrals & Variable Mass
Newton’s Second Law (
) assumes mass is constant. When a rocket burns fuel, we must use the true form:
.
In AP Physics 1, we defined Impulse (
) as the average force multiplied by the time interval (
). However, during real-world collisions—like a baseball bat hitting a ball—the force is not constant. It starts at zero, spikes to a massive peak, and returns to zero within milliseconds.
1. Impulse as an Integral
To find the true Impulse (and therefore the change in momentum) of a varying force, we must integrate the Force function over the time interval of the collision.
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Whether you are given an equation to integrate or a graph to calculate the geometric area, the result gives you the exact change in momentum (
).
2. Variable Mass Systems (The Rocket Equation)
What happens if the mass of the system changes while it moves? A rocket is the classic example: it accelerates by violently throwing mass (exhaust gas) backward. As it burns fuel, the rocket’s total mass decreases, making it easier to accelerate!
We cannot use
. We must start from the conservation of momentum for the system (Rocket + Exhaust). The resulting differential equation gives us the thrust force:
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By integrating this relationship, we get the ideal Rocket Equation, which determines the final velocity of the rocket after burning its fuel:
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3. Quick AP Practice
📚 Unit C4 Mastery Challenge
1. A 2 kg object is at rest. A force given by
is applied for 2 seconds. What is the final velocity of the object?
Check Answer
First, find the Impulse by integrating the force:Impulse equals the change in momentum (
2. A rocket has a total initial mass of
. It burns fuel at a constant rate
(so
). If the exhaust velocity is
, what is the instantaneous acceleration of the rocket in deep space (ignoring gravity) as a function of time
?
Check Answer
Start with Newton’s Second Law:The net force is the thrust:
The mass is decreasing over time:
Substitute these in:
Solve for acceleration:
