Momentum is speed or force of movement and it is defined as moving body. Momentum must have both mass and velocity. Examples of momentum include if a car and big truck are rolling down a hill, the truck will roll faster. A bullet has a lot of momentum with a small mass.
momentum is the product of mass and velocity.
They lost the momentum in their relationship, it is now dull. He lost his momentum for working hard, he was so close. The momentum is conserved when two bumper cars hits each other.
The following are some of the quantities have been found to be conserved in all known cases: mass, energy, momentum, angular momentum, electric charge, color charge.
Examples of conservable quantities include energy, momentum, charge, and angular momentum. These quantities remain constant in isolated systems, meaning they are conserved during interactions and transformations.
Collisions between billiard balls where the total momentum before the collision is equal to the total momentum after. Recoil of a gun when a bullet is fired, where the forward momentum of the bullet is equal and opposite to the backward momentum of the gun. Ice skaters pushing off each other in opposite directions, resulting in a conservation of momentum system.
A team that has the momentum is on the move and is going to take some effort to stop. A team that has a lot of momentum is really on the move and is going to be hard to stop. A sports team which is on the move has the momentum. If an object is in motion (on the move) then it has momentum.
Momentum like mass will always be conserved in any process. Momentum is the product of mass and velocity of the object. It is symbolically denoted as p=m*v where p = momentum, m = mass and v = velocity
dispalcement, velocity, acceleration, force, momentum, orque, . to name a few from mechnics; electric and magnetic fields from electromagtetics etc
Examples of vector quantity are displacement, velocity, acceleration, momentum, force, E-filed, B-field, torque, energy, etc.
A vector quantity is any quantity in which a direction is relevant. Some examples include position, velocity, acceleration, force, momentum, rotational momentum (the vector is defined to point in the direction of the axis in this case), torque, etc.
Some examples of vector magnitudes include speed velocity, acceleration, force, displacement, and momentum.
One of the best examples of transfer of momentum is when a cue ball strikes a stationary billiard ball, causing the stationary ball to move while the cue ball slows down or stops. This transfer of momentum demonstrates the principle of conservation of momentum in action.