It doubles. Momentum (p) is the product of velocity (v) and mass (m). For a given mass, if you double the velocity, you'll double the momentum. Velocity and momentum are said to be directly proportional. p = m x v
The moment of an object can be found with the equation:
P = mv
where P is momentum, m is mass, and v is velocity.
If you were to double the velocity without changing the mass, the momentum, P, would also be doubled.
According to Newtonian physics, if the velocity of an object is doubled, the momentum will increase by a factor of 2.
If the mass doubles and the velocity is constant, then the momentum doubles.
p = m * v where p is the momentum, m is the mass, and v is the velocity.
If the mass is doubled and the velocity is also doubled,
then the momentum is four times its original value.
Momentum also increases by the factor of 2 .
Momentum is mass times velocity. The answer, from that fact, should be trivially easy to determine.
Momentum is proportional to both velocity and mass; therefore in this case, momentum would increase by a factor of 2 x 2 = 4.
The Momentum is also doubled.
Momentum = (mass x velocity) = M V If velocity is doubled, then new momentum = (M x 2V) = 2 x (M V) = double the original momentum. ========================= Kinetic energy = 1/2 M V2 If 'V' is doubled, then new KE = (1/2 M) (2V)2 = (1/2 M) (4V2) = 4 (1/2 M V2) = 4 times original KE.
Yes it can.When a body moves in a circular path keeping its speed uniform then it will have variable vilocity as vilocity is the speed in a particular direction and while moving in a circular path its direction keeps changing and so does vilocity
Velocity describes both the speed and direction an object is moving.
If the velocity is constant there is no acceleration. Speed is not velocity, velocity has speed and direction. I A car going around a circular track at 60 mph keeps the same speed but changes direction and thus accelerates at a constant speed. Velocity is speed in a certain direction. So change the speed but keep direction the same and you change the velocity. or Change the direction while keeping the speed the same and you change the velocity. If the speed is constant, any change of direction is a change in velocity. Driving around in a circle is a case of constantly changing direction.
The mass and velocity of an object do not determine its wavelength: it could be travelling in a straight line!
The answer is velocity.
The kinetic energy would be quadrupled, and the momentum would be doubled.
If the mass is doubled,speed should be halved to conserve momentum.
Momentum depends on mass and velocity.
The property you are looking for is the objects momentum. Momentum = Mass * Velocity.
Because momentum is mass X velocity. Velocity has direction, otherwise it is speed.
The product of mass and velocity determines the momentum of a moving body.
a moving objects momentum
The property you are looking for is the objects momentum. Momentum = Mass * Velocity.
skateboard. momentum is mass times velocity thus if 0 velocity=0 momentum
Momentum
Momentum is mass times velocity. Note that velocity and speed are not exactly the same thing. Velocity is a term used in physics to define both the speed and the direction of a moving object, so if two objects are moving at the same speed but in opposite directions, they have opposite momentum.