The SI unit of Momentum is kilogram meters per second --> (kg*m)/s
The SI base unit for mass is the kilogram
pascal
(Any unit of mass) times (any unit of speed) is a unit of linear momentum. Angular momentum would need radians.In the SI (metric) system, it's kilogram meter per second kg.m.s-1 or Newton-second.
Momentum is defined as mass x velocity, so the SI units are kilograms x meters / seconds. There is no commonly-used special name for this unit.
It's ms-1. Since SI unit of velocity is ms-1, thus the rate of change of it should be m/second
A second is a SI base unit.
Momentum is mass * velocity. Its units, in the SI system are kilogram metre per second
The SI base unit for temperature is the kelvin.
Neither is an SI base unit.
The SI base unit for temperature is the kelvin.
The SI base unit for mass is the kilogram
It does. Momentum=mass* velocity. Momentum is kilogram meters per second
There is no SI Base Unit for energy. The unit for energy, the joule is a Derived Unit.
Yes, the kilogram is the SI base unit for mass. Fun fact: the kilogram is the only SI base unit with a prefix.
Kelvin The SI base unit of temperature is the kelvin.
The SI base unit for mass is the kilogram
Momentum = mass x velocity, so logically, the unit is kg x meter / second. This unit has no special name.