Two-Body Elastic Collisions
Before specializing to two-body Coulomb collisions, it is convenient to develop a general theory of two-body elastic collisions.
Consider an elastic collision between a species-
particle and a species-
particle. Let the mass and instantaneous velocity of the former particle be
and
, respectively. Likewise, let the
mass and
instantaneous velocity of the latter particle be
and
, respectively. The velocity of the
center of mass is given by
 |
(3.10) |
Moreover, conservation of momentum implies that
is a constant of the motion. The relative velocity is
defined
 |
(3.11) |
We can express
and
in terms of
and
as follows:
Here,
 |
(3.14) |
is the reduced mass.
The total kinetic energy of the system is written
 |
(3.15) |
Now, the kinetic energy is the same before and after an elastic collision. Hence, given that
is constant, we deduce that the
magnitude of the relative velocity,
, is also the same before and after such a collision. Thus, it is only the direction of the
relative velocity vector, rather than its length, that changes during an elastic collision.