Nate the Skate was an avid physics student whose main non-physics interest in life was high-speed skateboarding. In particular, Nate would often don a protective suit of Bounce-Tex, which he invented, and after working up a high speed on his skateboard, would collide with some object. In this way, he got a gut feel for the physical properties of collisions and succeeded in combining his two passions. On one occasion, the Skate, with a mass of 129 kg, including his armor, hurled himself against an 831 kg stationary statue of Isaac Newton in a perfectly elastic linear collision. As a result, Isaac started moving at 1.29 m/s and Nate bounced backward. What were Nate's speeds immediately before and after the collision? Ignore friction with the ground. Choose the correct option;
(a) before collision: 4.8m/sAfter Collision: 1.29m/s
(b) before collision: 2.8m/sAfter Collision: 2.29m/s
(c) before collision: 3.8m/sAfter Collision: 3.29m/s
(d) before collision: 5.8m/sAfter Collision: 1.29m/s