The object's velocity will be 109.54 meters per second.
To measure kinetic energy:Let us suppose an object of mass m moving wtih velocity vKinetic Energy of that object= mv2/2
The object has a mass of 2kg. When velocity is tripled the kinetic energy becomes 225 joules.
1014 Joules
a moving car has kinetic energy which is defined by the equation "Kinetic Energy = (1/2) X Mass (Kilograms) X (Velocity (m/s))2
velocity Kinetic energy is equal to (1/2)mv2, where m is mass and v is velocity. Higher velocities contribute even more to higher kinetic energies than higher masses since velocity is squared in the equation. For comparison, a 6.35 kg bowling ball moving at 7.6 m/s will have a kinetic energy of 183.4 Joules. A 0.02 kg bullet moving at 200 m/s will have a kinetic energy of 400 Joules. (Increase that to 300 m/s, and the kinetic energy moves up to 900 Joules.)
KE=(1/2)mv246080 Joules
To measure kinetic energy:Let us suppose an object of mass m moving wtih velocity vKinetic Energy of that object= mv2/2
Energy related to motion is called "kinetic energy".
The object has a mass of 2kg. When velocity is tripled the kinetic energy becomes 225 joules.
1014 Joules
a moving car has kinetic energy which is defined by the equation "Kinetic Energy = (1/2) X Mass (Kilograms) X (Velocity (m/s))2
velocity Kinetic energy is equal to (1/2)mv2, where m is mass and v is velocity. Higher velocities contribute even more to higher kinetic energies than higher masses since velocity is squared in the equation. For comparison, a 6.35 kg bowling ball moving at 7.6 m/s will have a kinetic energy of 183.4 Joules. A 0.02 kg bullet moving at 200 m/s will have a kinetic energy of 400 Joules. (Increase that to 300 m/s, and the kinetic energy moves up to 900 Joules.)
Joules, all energy is measured in joules.
225,000 Joules
The kinetic energy of any moving object is 1/2 of (its mass) x (the square of its speed). The SI unit of any kind of energy is Joules.
The "units" are called joules (J), not to be impolite. The answer would be about 19.9809 J.
200 joules at 20m/s