An 'inelastic collision' is a
collision in which some of the
kinetic energy of the colliding bodies is converted into
internal energy in at least one body such that kinetic energy is not conserved.
In collisions of macroscopic bodies, some kinetic energy is turned into vibrational energy of the atoms, causing a heating effect.
The
molecules 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 one instant, half the collisions are, to a varying extent, inelastic (the pair possesses less kinetic energy after the collision than before) and half could be described as “super-elastic” (possessing ''more'' kinetic energy after the collision than before). Averaged across an entire sample, molecular collisions are elastic.
Inelastic collisions may not conserve kinetic energy, but they do obey
conservation of momentum. Simple
ballistic pendulum problems obey the conservation of kinetic energy ''only'' when the block swings to its largest angle.

An inelastic collision between equal masses
In
nuclear physics, an inelastic collision is one in which the incoming particle causes the
nucleus it strikes to become excited or to break up.
Deep inelastic scattering is a method of probing the structure of subatomic particles in much the same way as Rutherford probed the inside of the atom (see
Rutherford scattering). Such experiments were performed on protons in the late
1960s using high-energy
electrons at the
Stanford Linear Accelerator (SLAC). As in Rutherford scattering, deep inelastic scattering of electrons by proton targets revealed that most of the incident electrons interacted very little and pass straight through, with only a small number bouncing back. This indicates that the charge in the
proton is concentrated in small lumps, reminiscent of Rutherford's discovery that the positive charge in an atom is concentrated at the nucleus. However, in the case of the proton, the evidence suggested three distinct concentrations of charge and not one.
Equations of Motion
This equation describes the conservation of momentum for a perfectly inelastic collision:
::
This describes in one dimension when two particles collide and stick together, ''i.e''
, the new mass is the sum of the two.
See also
★
Elastic collision
★
Coefficient of restitution