momentum is mass x velocity. If mass is 1 kg and velocity 1m/s then momentum is 1kgm/s
The magnitude of momentum is (mass) x (speed).
This object's momentum is (4 kg) x (5 m/s) = 20 kg-m/sec.
Mass x Acceleration = Force
20 kg x 5 m/s
100 kg-m/s or 100 N
Momentum = M V = 100 kg-m/s
Momentum = speed multiplied to mass. M'm = 5 ms^-1 X 20 kg . M'm = 100 kg m s^-1
Momentum is the product of measuring the mass and velocity of a moving object. How much something weighs by the rate of speed it was traveling. Can tell you alot about the damage that could be doneup on impact. As well as tell you how much force would be needed to stop the object in question.
It is 100 newton-seconds.
momentum=mass*velocity 1*10=10Ns
Momentum = M V = 100 kg-m/s
Momentum = speed multiplied to mass. M'm = 5 ms^-1 X 20 kg . M'm = 100 kg m s^-1
Momentum is the product of measuring the mass and velocity of a moving object. How much something weighs by the rate of speed it was traveling. Can tell you alot about the damage that could be doneup on impact. As well as tell you how much force would be needed to stop the object in question.
It is 100 newton-seconds.
momentum=mass*velocity 1*10=10Ns
If the forces are in the same direction, add them and if they're in opposite directions, subtract them. I'm not sure what to do if they're in directions other than that.
Just use the definition of momentum: multiply mass x velocity.
Using p=mv. p: momentum (kg ms^-1) m: mass (kg) v: velocity (ms^1) p = (25)(4) = 100 kg ms^-1
Momentum is P = mv or Momentum = mass x velocity so the momentum of that ball would be 6 x 4.5 = 27kg m/s
i would have to say 30000 kg ms but i may be wrong
Simply multiply the velocity times the mass.
It's ms-1. Since SI unit of velocity is ms-1, thus the rate of change of it should be m/second