physics momentum and impulse
A helium nucleus (He-4) of mass 4 amu moving with a speed v breaks up into a neutron (mass 1 amu) and a helium isotope nucleus (He-3) of mass 3 amu. The neutron moves off at right angles to the original He-4. If the neutron speed is 3v, what is the final velocity of the He-3 nucleus?
Ok, so I drew a diagram, chose my x and y axes and I know that Momentum is conserved in both directions and that initial momentum = final momentum but I can't seem to figure it out! Here's what I have:
H4= He 4 amu Atom
N= Nucleus
H3= He 3 amu Atom
Pi = Pf
MH4VH4 = -MH3VH3 + MNVN
Subtract MNVN to get
MH4VH4 - MNVN = -MH3VH3
Divide by -MH3 to get
(MH4/-MH3)VH4 – (MN/-MH3)VN = VH3
But then what do I do with the velocity? Please help me!!