Use the formula that defines momentum:
Momentum = mass x velocity
momentum is mass x velocity = 300 x 35 = 10,500 kgm/s
Momentum in classical mechanics is defined as mass times velocity. The magnitude of the momentum of an object with mass 3000kg and speed 0.2 m/s has a momentum of 600 mkg/s. A human walking at the same speed of 0.2 m/s weighing, let's say, 100 kg has a momentum of 20 mkg/s which is 30 times smaller.
The product of mass and velocity determines the momentum of a moving body.
If you return to the same state of motion before you began gaining momentum, then momentum lost will be equal to momentum gained. I mean really, if you start out not moving with a momentum of 0 and end not moving with a momentum of 0, then of course there the bloody same. If you start at 0 and never stop moving, then obviously your not losing momentum so the statement is false.
no
moving truck
a moving objects momentum
Momentum is motion. When a car is moving it is exhibiting momentum. A young professional getting promotions is experiencing momentum.
The Roller-skate Momentum = (mass) multiplied by (speed) . Anything moving has more momentum than anything that's not moving. The thing that's not moving has zero speed, so it also has zero momentum.
Any moving object with mass has momentum, since p = mv, where p is momentum, m is mass, and v is velocity.
All moving objects have Momentum.
0.
yes