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In an isolated system the total momentum of a system remains conserved. For example If you fire a bullet from Gun , bullet go forward with some linear momentum and in order to conserve the linear momentum the gun recoils
Which of what ? There's no list of choices, no examples, no suggestions, nothing to choose from.
Yes. You can think of an impulse as of a transfer of momentum.
More or less. Actually, a moving object has momentum - defined as mass times velocity. The word "impulse" is used for transfer of momentum, for example, in a collision. It has the same units as momentum, but the use of the word "impulse" seems inappropriate in this context.
energy transfer through transferring momentum. karim khan
In an isolated system the total momentum of a system remains conserved. For example If you fire a bullet from Gun , bullet go forward with some linear momentum and in order to conserve the linear momentum the gun recoils
Which of what ? There's no list of choices, no examples, no suggestions, nothing to choose from.
I don't think there is a "best example"; what is best may depend on the point you want to convey. However, in practice, both elastic and inelastic collisions are often used as examples.
Yes, the electrical momentum does transfer to the momentum of masses.
Simply put, four-momentum transfer is the special relativistic spacetime analog of classical (three-) momentum transfer. In classical physics, two bodies can interact and exchange momentum in three spacial dimensions. In particle physics, strictly spatial momentum vectors do not suffice. Instead we use four-momentum, a Lorentz vector. Four-momentum transfer is often referred to as Q^2 is particle physics literature. An interaction that transfer a large amount of four-momentum is a high Q^2 interaction.
Yes. You can think of an impulse as of a transfer of momentum.
More or less. Actually, a moving object has momentum - defined as mass times velocity. The word "impulse" is used for transfer of momentum, for example, in a collision. It has the same units as momentum, but the use of the word "impulse" seems inappropriate in this context.
energy transfer through transferring momentum. karim khan
No. Total momentum always remains constant. Therefore, if the momentum of one object decreases, the momentum of another must needs increase.
I am guessing renalectomy.
Momentum transfer or pressure variances.
impulse (force x time) is equal to momentum (mass x velocity); Ft=mv