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.
The SI unit of Momentum is kilogram meters per second --> (kg*m)/s
(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.
Same as the unit of momentum - an impulse is a transfer of momentum. Velocity x mass. Or the equivalent force x time.
kg m/s
Momentum of a body is got by the product of its mass and velocity. If the concerned body is at rest then momentum is ZERO. If m is the mass and v is the velocity then mv is the momentum. Momentum is a vector quantity. Its unit is kg m/s
Momentum = mass x velocity, so logically, the unit is kg x meter / second. This unit has no special name.
The international unit for temperature is the Kelvin. However, the degree Centigrade is more common popularly, i.e., outside the scientific community.
The SI unit of Momentum is kilogram meters per second --> (kg*m)/s
It does. Momentum=mass* velocity. Momentum is kilogram meters per second
(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.
Same as the unit of momentum - an impulse is a transfer of momentum. Velocity x mass. Or the equivalent force x time.
kg m/s
Sure. That's a perfectly good unit of momentum. So is (any unit of mass) divided by (any unit of speed).
kg m/s
The units for impulse are kg.m/s. This is because impulse= (final momentum) -(initial momentum) and the units for momentum are kg.m/s.
kg-m/s
The symbol for momentum is "p"