momentum is the product of the velocity and mass: 250,000 kg m/s
== == Momentum is the product of the mass of an object multiplied by its velocity (or speed). Momentum is conserved so if a moving object hits a staionary object the total momentum of the two objects after the collision is the same as the momentum of the original moving object.
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.
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.
Just multiply mass x velocity.
Momentum = Mass x Velocity. (p=m*v)The mass of an object made of matter can not be zero.If the object (car) is moving, then the velocity will be non-zero, and the object will have non-zero momentum.So, if you are driving or rolling the car, it has momentum.If it is parked, then it will have 0 velocity (with respect to the earth), and thus will have 0 momentum.So, when the car is moving, it has net momentum. When it is parked it has zero momentum. I then just becomes a mater of semantics whether having zero momentum is equivalent to not having momentum, or if it is actually a valid value for momentum or state of momentum.
No, it does not have a momentum of zero because the formula for momentum is p = m x v, therefore since the plane has a mass and it is moving, there is momentum.*p = momentum*m = mass (kg)*v = velocity (m/s)
A plane doesn't move "at 250 miles"; probably you mean "miles per hour". Convert that to meter/second, then multiply the mass with the speed.
The property that a moving object has due to its mass and velocity is momentum. Momentum is calculated as the product of mass and velocity, and it represents how difficult it is to stop a moving object.
A large mass moving slowly would have more momentum than a small mass moving slowly because momentum is a product of mass and velocity. Even if both masses are moving at the same speed, the larger mass would still have more momentum due to its greater mass.
No, momentum is given by the product of an object's mass and its velocity, so a larger mass moving slowly could still have significant momentum. Momentum depends on both mass and velocity, so even if an object is moving slowly, a large mass can still have considerable momentum.
"Momentum" is the product of mass x velocity. You can base your calculations on that.
The product of mass and velocity determines the momentum of a moving body.
Momentum depends on mass and velocity.
based on the momentum formula, momentum equals mass times velocity, momentum can be achieved when something with mass is moving. P=mv
The momentum of a moving object is determined by its mass and velocity. The greater the mass and the faster the velocity of the object, the greater its momentum. Momentum is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude and direction.
The momentum of a moving object depends on its mass and velocity. Momentum is calculated by multiplying an object's mass by its velocity, making it directly proportional to both factors.
When the mass of a moving object is doubled and its speed remains the same, its momentum also doubles. Momentum is directly proportional to mass, so doubling the mass will result in a doubling of the momentum regardless of the speed.