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inertia is the laziness of an object, or an objects resistance to change its state of motion, or how easy it is to start or stop an object. Mass is the measure of an object's inertia. Therefore with more mass, an object has more inertia.
Yes, inertia=mass*velocity
Its mass. Greater the mass more the inertia
The more mass an object has, the more inertia it has. It is harder to change the motion of an object that has more mass.
the greater the mass of an object, the more inertia it has, so to answer your ? yes inertia changes depending on mass :]
The greater the mass of an object the greater it's inertia The greater the mass of an object the greater it's inertia The greater the mass of an object the greater it's inertia
inertia is the laziness of an object, or an objects resistance to change its state of motion, or how easy it is to start or stop an object. Mass is the measure of an object's inertia. Therefore with more mass, an object has more inertia.
Yes, inertia=mass*velocity
no more, inertia is proportional to mass
Yes, inertia=mass*velocity
Its mass. Greater the mass more the inertia
Its mass. Greater the mass more the inertia
Nothing specifically. Inertia is a proprety of matter (as you may know from the Bill Nye the Science Guy intro), and just because there is more mass to an oject doesn't really mean that it would have more inertia. However, other forces such as friction and gravity are spread over an oject, so there would be more friction due to the mass and more downwards force because of gravity + the mass.
An object with more momentum will have more inertia. Inertia is the ability to resist a change in force; objects with higher masses and higher speeds will have greater inertia. Speed * mass = momentum
The more mass an object has, the more inertia it has. It is harder to change the motion of an object that has more mass.
The amount of mass affects the amount of inertia. The greater the mass, the more inertia it possesses.
the greater the mass of an object, the more inertia it has, so to answer your ? yes inertia changes depending on mass :]