No, momentum is measured in units of kilograms times meters per second (kgm/s), while impulse is measured in units of Newton seconds (Ns). Momentum is a measure of an object's motion, while impulse is a measure of the change in momentum experienced by an object.
To calculate impulse in a physics problem, you multiply the force applied to an object by the time over which the force is applied. The formula for impulse is Impulse Force x Time. Impulse is a vector quantity and is measured in Newton-seconds (Ns) or kgm/s.
Impulse is the change in momentum of an object. It is calculated by multiplying the force applied to an object by the time over which the force is applied. Impulse is a vector quantity and is measured in units of Newton-seconds (Ns) or kg m/s.
I believe the answer is no. The impulse produced is also time related. Impulse force is measured as dp/dt. Therefore a smaller force produced for a very quick time could produce a larger impulse than a large force over a longer time.
impulse generator equation is a difference of two exponential functions V0 = Vs/k (exp-at - exp-bt)
Impulse is found by multiplying the force applied to an object by the time duration over which the force is applied. Mathematically, impulse (J) = force (F) x time (Δt). Impulse is measured in newton-seconds (Ns) or in units of momentum, which is kgm/s.
Specific impulse :)
Force = mass x acceleration = kg(m/s^2) or N Momentum = mass x change in velocity = kg(m/s) or Ns The units of impulse are the same as momentum's because impulse is just the change in momentum.
impulse is impulse
Impulse = mv Impulse = Fmv
I bought the hat on impulse. It was just an impulse.
The voltage is measured by high and low range. Measurements are referred to as r.m.s. , switching impulses reflected by line to line, earth to line contact.