momentum is the product of mass and velocity.
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.
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.
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.
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
Examples of vector quantity are displacement, velocity, acceleration, momentum, force, E-filed, B-field, torque, energy, etc.
Examples of vector quantity are displacement, velocity, acceleration, momentum, force, E-filed, B-field, torque, energy, etc.
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.
Momentum of an object is its own property but it can be transferred by that object to any other object during their collision ( elastic or inelastic ) so as to conserve the total momentum of the system as demonstrated by the law of conservation of momentum. One of the examples of the transferring of momentum is the transfer of momentum and incident energy from photons of x rays to the loosely bound electrons in graphite target in Compton effect.
Energy. Momentum.(In some cases only)
an extensive property Examples include mass and volume.
i thought of a software company that would make the computers go faster and gives them more momentum
The total momentum before the collision is the same as the total momentum after the collision. This is known as "conservation of momentum".