elastic collision - meaning and definition. What is elastic collision
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What (who) is elastic collision - definition

COLLISION IN WHICH KINETIC ENERGY IS CONSERVED AND NOT DISSIPATED
Elastic interaction; Elastic interactions; Elastic Collisions; Elastic Collision
  • Professor [[Walter Lewin]] explaining one-dimensional elastic collisions

Hash collision         
  • John Smith and Sandra Dee are both being directed to the same cell. Open addressing will cause the hash table to redirect Sandra Dee to another cell.
COMPUTER SCIENCE SITUATION WHERE TWO DATA ELEMENTS SHARE A HASHTAG, CHECKSUM, FINGERPRINT, ETC.
Hash collisions; Hash collision (computer science); Cryptographic hash collision
In computer science, a hash collision or clash is when two pieces of data in a hash table share the same hash value. The hash value in this case is derived from a hash function which takes a data input and returns a fixed length of bits.
hash collision         
  • John Smith and Sandra Dee are both being directed to the same cell. Open addressing will cause the hash table to redirect Sandra Dee to another cell.
COMPUTER SCIENCE SITUATION WHERE TWO DATA ELEMENTS SHARE A HASHTAG, CHECKSUM, FINGERPRINT, ETC.
Hash collisions; Hash collision (computer science); Cryptographic hash collision
<programming> (Or "hash clash") When two different keys hash to the same value, i.e. to the same location in a {hash table}. ESR once asked a friend what he expected Berkeley to be like. The friend replied, "Well, I have this mental picture of naked women throwing Molotov cocktails, but I think that's just a collision in my hash tables." [Jargon File] (1995-01-23)
Ship collision         
STRUCTURAL IMPACT BETWEEN TWO SHIPS OR ONE SHIP AND A FLOATING OR STILL OBJECT SUCH AS AN ICEBERG
Ship strike; Vessel collision
Ship collision is the structural impact between two ships or one ship and a floating or still object such as an iceberg.Database Of Ship Collisions With Icebergs Ship collisions are of particular importance in marine accidents.

Wikipedia

Elastic collision

In physics, an elastic collision is an encounter (collision) between two bodies in which the total kinetic energy of the two bodies remains the same. In an ideal, perfectly elastic collision, there is no net conversion of kinetic energy into other forms such as heat, noise, or potential energy.

During the collision of small objects, kinetic energy is first converted to potential energy associated with a repulsive or attractive force between the particles (when the particles move against this force, i.e. the angle between the force and the relative velocity is obtuse), then this potential energy is converted back to kinetic energy (when the particles move with this force, i.e. the angle between the force and the relative velocity is acute).

Collisions of atoms are elastic, for example Rutherford backscattering.

A useful special case of elastic collision is when the two bodies have equal mass, in which case they will simply exchange their momenta.

The molecules—as distinct from atoms—of a gas or liquid rarely experience perfectly elastic collisions because kinetic energy is exchanged between the molecules’ translational motion and their internal degrees of freedom with each collision. At any instant, half the collisions are, to a varying extent, inelastic collisions (the pair possesses less kinetic energy in their translational motions after the collision than before), and half could be described as “super-elastic” (possessing more kinetic energy after the collision than before). Averaged across the entire sample, molecular collisions can be regarded as essentially elastic as long as Planck's law forbids energy from being carried away by black-body photons.

In the case of macroscopic bodies, perfectly elastic collisions are an ideal never fully realized, but approximated by the interactions of objects such as billiard balls.

When considering energies, possible rotational energy before and/or after a collision may also play a role.