Momentum is the product of mass x velocity, so if this product is the same for both, they will have the same momentum.
If a car and a truck are traveling at the same speed, the truck would have more momentum because it has a greater mass.
The total momentum of the system doesn't change. In this case, it refers to the momentum of the toy truck plus the momentum of the toy car.
Yes. At the same velocity, a truck would have more momentum than a car as it has greater mass. Momentum is the product of mass and velocity: ρ=mv
Yes. (By going faster.)
butholes
momentum is velocity multiplied by weight so if a small car weighs less than a large truck then it just needs to go faster to aquire the same momentum.
yes the momentum of it is the same because P initial = P final ALWAYS!
yes, the car would have to be traveling at a faster velocity though, assuming that the car weighs less
A truck.
By traveling at the same speed. Kinetic energy is a completely different story, however.
moving truck
That would depend on their velocity (speed with direction), since the formula for momentum is momentum=Mass*Velocity. If they are moving at the same Velocity, the heavier of the two would have greater momentum.