Yes, a hummingbird can have the same momentum as a cruise ship if its velocity is sufficiently high relative to its mass. Momentum is calculated as the product of mass and velocity (p = mv), so a small, lightweight bird could theoretically achieve a momentum equal to that of a much larger ship by flying at an extremely high speed. However, in practical terms, the speeds required for a hummingbird to match the momentum of a cruise ship are far beyond its physical capabilities.
His name is Christopher, like the cruise director on the same ship.
A cruise ship passenger is someone who is on a cruise ship during a cruise.
Not all cruise ships are the same but the average size is about 25,000 tons.
It is the same on any ship "man overboard". Only yell it if someone really is overboard, since the cruise ship staff will respond as if it is an emergency.
A cruise ship tourist is a person who tours you around a cruise ship.
It is a cruise liner or cruise ship.
Its the cruise ship Voyager. Look up on youtube cruise ship in storm. Same vessel. No joke.
About the same as the length of a piece of string..........
A cruise ship passenger.
A cruise ship passenger.
the momentum of a body is reached using the equation MOMENTUM=MASS*VELOCITY , in this case, the cruise has a very large mass but a very low speed while the speedboat has a very high speed while having a comparitively low mass.
A cruise port or port of call is simply where a cruise ship stops. The Embarkation Port is where the cruise starts. The Disembarkation Port is where the cruise ends. Often those are the same. The Ports of Call are the stops the ship makes for passengers to get off and take shore excursions.