If the speed of an object doubles, its kinetic energy quadruples. This is because velocity is squared in the formula for kinetic energy.
At twice the speed, the kinetic energy will be four times greater.
It goes as velocity squared so if doubled increases by 4
True
toaster
momentum is doubled, kinetic energy is quadrupled
If speed/velocity is doubled and mass remains constant, then kinetic energy becomes quadrupled.
If the velocity of Earth were to double, it would have 4 times the kinetic energy. Twice the current kinetic energy would already be enough to catapult the Earth away from the Sun - never to return.
since kinetic energy is proportional to the square of velocity it is multiplied by 2 x 2 which is 4
toaster
momentum is doubled, kinetic energy is quadrupled
If speed/velocity is doubled and mass remains constant, then kinetic energy becomes quadrupled.
If the velocity of Earth were to double, it would have 4 times the kinetic energy. Twice the current kinetic energy would already be enough to catapult the Earth away from the Sun - never to return.
since kinetic energy is proportional to the square of velocity it is multiplied by 2 x 2 which is 4
Kinetic Energy increases as velocity increases. Kinetic Energy = 1/2 * Mass * Velocity2
It doubles.
Momentum increases
assuming its not starting at zero, if an object velocity is doubled, its kinetic energy (KE) is four times. If its trebled , its KE is nine times equation : KE = (m*v^2)/2 joules m=mass v=velocity
Kinetic energy is determined by mass and velocity. The velocity is halved if you double the original mass, so the kinetic energy stays the same (unless the mass added has the same kinetic energy in the observer's reference frame as the original mass).
what happens if the kinectic energy if the mass doubled
The kinetic energy would be quadrupled, and the momentum would be doubled.