(1) The general concept of inertia, according to newton's first laws, concerning objects' masses when it comes to resistance. (2) Rotational inertia (3) Gyroscopic inertia
The different types of inertia are inertia of rest (tendency of an object to remain at rest), inertia of motion (tendency of an object to continue moving in a straight line at a constant speed), and inertia of direction (tendency of an object to resist changes in its direction of motion).
Inertia is directly related to an object's mass, which is a property of matter. The greater the mass of an object, the greater its inertia, meaning it resists changes in its motion. Different types of matter have different masses and therefore exhibit different levels of inertia.
The three types of inertia are inertia of rest, inertia of motion, and inertia of direction. Inertia of rest is the tendency of an object to remain at rest. Inertia of motion is the tendency of an object to continue moving at a constant velocity. Inertia of direction is the tendency of an object to resist changes in its direction of motion.
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.
There are three types of inertia: inertia of rest (object at rest tends to stay at rest), inertia of motion (object in motion tends to stay in motion), and inertia of direction (object resists changes in its direction of motion).
Different velocities is what causes objects to have the same mass and different amounts of inertia. This can be written in a formula.
Force and inertia are not the same. They are quite different. They do both have a relationship to the motion of objects having mass.
The relationship between the different inertia of objects and their ability to resist changes in motion is that objects with greater inertia are more resistant to changes in motion. Inertia is the tendency of an object to stay at rest or in motion unless acted upon by an external force. Objects with higher inertia require more force to change their motion compared to objects with lower inertia.
You, and I are two unique objects and we both have inertia. Anything with mass has inertia. I probably have more inertia than you, because my mass is about 113.63 kg, and you are likely to have less mass than that.
If the objects have different velocities they will have different inertia.
No, two objects with the same volume may not have the same inertia. Inertia depends on the mass and distribution of mass within an object, not just its volume. Objects with different densities or shapes can have different inertial properties even if they have the same volume.
Nope. While weight is proportional to both mass and the local gravitational field or acceleration, inertia (and by extension momentum) is related only to mass - and special types of inertia, such as rotational inertia, is related only to the distribution of mass (bunched up mass has less rotational inertia than the same amount of mass, only spread out).