Kinetic energy is equal to one half the mass times the square of the velocity. Thus, changes in velocity and mass do not have the same effect on kinetic energy. If you increase the mass by a factor of 10 at the same velocity, you increase the kinetic energy by a factor of 10. However, if you increase the velocity by a factor of 10 at the same mass, you increase the kinetic energy by a factor of 100.
If the two metals are at the same temperature then the atoms in each would have the same average kinetic energy. Temperature is a measure of the "average energy per degree of freedom". To simplify things somewhat, kinetic energy is one of these degrees of freedom and so if they have the same temperature they have the same kinetic energy. Go to the related link below for a fuller understanding of the connection between kinetic energy and temperature.
If several objects have the same speed and the same velocity,then each has the same kinetic energy.
Increasing temperature will increase molecular speed.An object with less massive molecules will have higher molecular speed at the same temperature.When kinetic temperature applies, two objects with the same average translational kinetic energy will have the same temperature. An important idea related to temperature is the fact that a collision between a molecule with high kinetic energy and one with low kinetic energy will transfer energy to the molecule of lower kinetic energy.
the same
No, thermal is a kind of kinetic energy.
The Kinetic Energy Stays The Same
yes they are same.
Kinetic energy is equal to one half the mass times the square of the velocity. Thus, changes in velocity and mass do not have the same effect on kinetic energy. If you increase the mass by a factor of 10 at the same velocity, you increase the kinetic energy by a factor of 10. However, if you increase the velocity by a factor of 10 at the same mass, you increase the kinetic energy by a factor of 100.
same if none has been lost. ke=0.5Xmv(squared) GPE=massxgravityxheight
Moving. Linear kinetic energy is basically the same thing as regular kinetic energy. hope that helps!
The kinetic energy of an object varies as the square of its velocity (Kinetic energy = mv2/2). So a plane with the same mass travelling at 3 times the velocity will have 9 times the kinetic energy.
If the two metals are at the same temperature then the atoms in each would have the same average kinetic energy. Temperature is a measure of the "average energy per degree of freedom". To simplify things somewhat, kinetic energy is one of these degrees of freedom and so if they have the same temperature they have the same kinetic energy. Go to the related link below for a fuller understanding of the connection between kinetic energy and temperature.
If several objects have the same speed and the same velocity,then each has the same kinetic energy.
The same units as for any type of energy. There is no special unit for kinetic energy.
Yes
Kinetic energy also depends on mass.