It is unclear what you mean. If you mean that you want to find momentum but do not have a value for velocity then it depends on what physical system you are using. If you want to find the momentum of an object with a velocity equal to zero then the momentum is zero.
Answer2.
You can find the momentum from its the integral of its force impulse fdt = d(mv). The momentum is mv= integral of fdt.
Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.
if velocity increases, so does momentum. and vice versa momentum = mass x velocity increasing mass or velocity or both will increase momentum
ACC TO FORMULAE p=mv2 WHERE p=MOMENTUM, m=MASS, v=VELOCITY IF MASS REMAIN CONSTANT , THEN CHANGE IN MOMENTUM IS DUE TO CHANGE IN VELOCITY. THEREFORE MOMENTUM IS DIRECTLY PROPOTIONAL TO VELOCITY.
No, momentum is directly proportional to velocity, and in the same direction..
As the velocity decreases, the momentum increases. Mass is the matter inside of something and momentum is how hard it is to stop something. Therefore momentum needs mass to function because without mass there would be no momentum. So think of the sentence above like this: velocity ( a measure of momentum) decreases, the momentum (including mass inside an object) goes up therefore making the mass increase while the velocity decreases.
momentum = mass x velocity => mass = momentum / velocity
velocity and mass are used to find the momentum.
Momentum is the product of Mass times Velocity Momentum = MV
First you have to convert weight into mass. This is dependent on the acceleration the mass is experiencing (either gravitational or centrifugal). If it is gravitational and it is at or near the surface of the Earth then mass=weight/9.81m/s2 If it is centrifugal then a=v2/r and mass=weight*r/v2 Then to find momentum just multiply mass by velocity.
Momentum of a moving body is got by the product of the mass and velocity. Hence P = m v Momentum is a vector quantity Its unit in SI system is kg m s-1
Momentum is defined as the product of the mass and the velocity. P = mv. As the body is at rest its velocity v = 0. Hence momentum P =0.
When something increases in velocity, its momentum would increase because momentum is equal to its mass * velocity. This means that the momentum and velocity are proportional, so twice the velocity is twice the momentum, and so on.
Momentum is mass multiplied by velocity - so it is proportional to the velocity. If the velocity triples then so does the momentum
if velocity increases, so does momentum. and vice versa momentum = mass x velocity increasing mass or velocity or both will increase momentum
if velocity increases, so does momentum. and vice versa momentum = mass x velocity increasing mass or velocity or both will increase momentum
Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.Momentum is mass x velocity; velocity has a direction, therefore momentum has a direction.
Momentum = (mass) times (velocity)mass = (Momentum) divided by (velocity)