no
No, its depends on the planets gravitational pull
Escape velocity from Earth depends only on the mass of the Earth and the distance from its center, not the mass or size of the rocket. All rockets need to reach the same escape velocity to leave Earth's gravitational pull, regardless of their size.
The greater the mass of the planet, the greater will be the escape velocity.
The escape velocity of a particle of mass m is independent of the mass of the particle. It is solely dependent on the mass and radius of the object it is trying to escape from. The escape velocity is given by the formula: (v = \sqrt{\frac{2GM}{r}}), where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the object, and r is the distance from the center of the object to the particle.
The distance doesn't depend on the mass.
Its velocity and its mass.
The escape velocity of an object only depends on the mass of the planet it is escaping from, not the mass of the object itself. Therefore, Starship B would also require a speed of about 11 km/s to escape from Earth.
The escape velocity is determined by the gravity of the planet which in turn is determined by the mass and size of the planet
To escape from a planet's gravitational pull, an object must reach a speed called the "escape velocity." This velocity depends on the mass and radius of the planet from which the object is trying to escape.
Not at all. It would take an infinitely large mass to produce an infinite escape velocity, and no such infinite mass exists. Furthermore, the escape velocity for any object is the same no matter what is trying to escape, so light does not have its own escape velocity. This question presumably concerns black holes. Light does not escape from black holes because the escape velocity is greater than the speed of light. The speed of light is not infinite, it is 300,000 kilometers per second.
Reduce your velocity or pay a one dollar fine.
The momentum of a rocket is directly proportional to its velocity during space travel. This means that as the rocket's velocity increases, its momentum also increases. Momentum is a measure of an object's motion, and in the case of a rocket, its momentum is determined by its mass and velocity. So, the faster a rocket travels in space, the greater its momentum will be.