That is true because momentum is mass times velocity
The product of an object's mass and velocity is called it's momentum. It is mostly called it's linear momentum to differentiate from the term angular momentum.
For an object to have momentum, it must have mass and velocity.
momentum is equal to the mass of an object x velocity of an object
momentum = mass * velocity As the momentum changes with constant mass, the velocity cahnges.
That is true because momentum is mass times velocity
That's the object's linear momentum.
mass x velocity = momentum. (velocity = speed with a direction)
The product of an object's mass and velocity is called it's momentum. It is mostly called it's linear momentum to differentiate from the term angular momentum.
Yes, mass will affect momentum in a collision or in anything else. Any object with mass and non-zero velocity will have momentum. Mass is directly proportional to momentum. Double the mass of an object moving with a given velocity and the momentum doubles.
The product of mass and velocity of an object is its momentum.
Momentum is the product of mass x velocity.
For an object to have momentum, it must have mass and velocity.
momentum is equal to the mass of an object x velocity of an object
Momentum is not just mass. Momentum is the product of mass x velocity.
Momentum
momentum = mass * velocity As the momentum changes with constant mass, the velocity cahnges.