kilogram-meters per second (kg.m/s)
the unit of measurement for destiny
Two essential parts of a measurement are the numerical value representing the quantity being measured and the unit of measurement used to quantify that quantity. For example, in measuring length, the numerical value might be 10, and the unit of measurement could be centimeters. Together, these two parts provide a precise and standardized way to communicate and compare measurements.
Vertical Foot
Pint
Amp
Momentum is defined as mass x velocity, so the SI units are kilograms x meters / seconds. There is no commonly-used special name for this unit.
Linear momentum is (mass)*(velocity)[a vector mv], so the SI unit would be kg*m/s, angular momentum is the sum of all resultant vectors of r x mv for each point on a spinning object, and would have units kg*m2/s
The eigenstates of the momentum operator in quantum mechanics are the wave functions that represent definite values of momentum. When a measurement is made on a particle's momentum, the wave function collapses into one of these eigenstates, giving the corresponding momentum value as the measurement result.
unit of measurement
No, a pencil is not a unit of measurement.
The unit of measurement of force is 'Newton'
Momentum = mass x velocity, so logically, the unit is kg x meter / second. This unit has no special name.
momentum
The SI unit of Momentum is kilogram meters per second --> (kg*m)/s
The unit for momentum is kilogram meters per second (kg m/s).
A possible unit of momentum is kilogram meters per second (kg m/s). This unit is commonly used to measure the momentum of an object, which is the product of its mass and velocity.
The smaller the unit the more accurate the measurement will be.