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Inertia: the property of matter that resists changes in motion.
Inertia can be defined as the relunctance of a body to acceleration. Therefore, the greater the inertia of a body, the less it will accelerate under a given force. Inertia is directly related to mass. The greater the mass, the greater the inertia.
Inertia does not vary from place to place. Inertia is simply the tendency of an object to resist changing its state. Inertia (and, by extension, momentum) only vary in relation to the mass of an object, not where the object is located.
It all depends on its acceleration, velocity, speed and its mass. The faster somthing goes, the more time it takes to slow down. To slow the same onject down fater, more force has to be applied in the opposite direction. A less massive object [lighter] takes less time to slow down than a more massive object [heavier].
Inertia is matter's unwillingness to slow down, speed up, or change direction in any way. It is also related to the matter's momentum. Momentum is caused by the body's velocity as well as the body's direction. If the velocity of the matter is increasing, or the body changes its direction, it can be said that the body of mass is experiencing inertia. When the body is accelerating (changing in velocity), the momentum of the matter is also changing (F=ma), thus mass and acceleration is related by momentum through inertia.
tendency to maintain momentum!!!!!!!!
Momentum and inertia are actually different, inertia is the tendency a body has to maintain a state of rest or uniform motion until acted upon by a external force momentum would be a impelling force or strength.
Inertia: the property of matter that resists changes in motion.
momentum is product of moment of inertia and angular velocity. There is always a 90 degree phase difference between velocity and acceleration vector in circular motion therefore angular momentum and acceleration can never be parallel
Inertia can be defined as the relunctance of a body to acceleration. Therefore, the greater the inertia of a body, the less it will accelerate under a given force. Inertia is directly related to mass. The greater the mass, the greater the inertia.
Inertia does not vary from place to place. Inertia is simply the tendency of an object to resist changing its state. Inertia (and, by extension, momentum) only vary in relation to the mass of an object, not where the object is located.
Gravity, inertia, momentum, acceleration, meterology, medicine (for when you crash). Take your pick.
I guess that momentum is part of the inertia, inertia is composed of momentum as the pages are related to the book. Inertia will be different if it has different kind of momentum. Force will affect momentum so inertia will change.
Inertia is the tendency for an object in motion to stay in motion. What you are referring to is momentum which is affected by mass and velocity.
It all depends on its acceleration, velocity, speed and its mass. The faster somthing goes, the more time it takes to slow down. To slow the same onject down fater, more force has to be applied in the opposite direction. A less massive object [lighter] takes less time to slow down than a more massive object [heavier].
Inertia is matter's unwillingness to slow down, speed up, or change direction in any way. It is also related to the matter's momentum. Momentum is caused by the body's velocity as well as the body's direction. If the velocity of the matter is increasing, or the body changes its direction, it can be said that the body of mass is experiencing inertia. When the body is accelerating (changing in velocity), the momentum of the matter is also changing (F=ma), thus mass and acceleration is related by momentum through inertia.
Newton's first law states that an object will remain at rest or in constant motion unless a force acts upon the object. The word inertia means the tendency for an object to remain in a state of rest or motion unless a force acts upon it. The name law of inertia is used for Newton's first law because it perfectly describes what the law is about.