When neither one was in motion.
That would depend on their velocity (speed with direction), since the formula for momentum is momentum=Mass*Velocity. If they are moving at the same Velocity, the heavier of the two would have greater momentum.
The momentum of a truck at rest is zero because momentum is the product of an object's mass and velocity. Since the truck is not moving, its velocity is zero, resulting in zero momentum.
No.
A truck that is more massive with the same velocity as the truck that is less massive will definitely have more momentum. This is illustrated in the equation for momentum:p = mvWhere p is momentum which is measured in Newton seconds, m is mass which is measured in kilograms, and v is velocity, measured in meters per second. If you plug in a larger mass for that same equivalent velocity, it will accordingly have more momentum.Also, if you just think about it, what would be harder to move: something with more mass or something with less mass?
Since momentum equals mass times velocity, if the mass of the truck times its velocity is greater than the mass of the bus times the bus' velocity then the momentum of the truck will be greater than the momentum of the bus.
The momentum of the truck can be calculated by multiplying its mass by its velocity. Therefore, the momentum of the truck would be 4500 kg * W m/s.
Momentum defined as p=mv.. The momentum of the truck depends on its velocity
A truck.
The total momentum of the system doesn't change. In this case, it refers to the momentum of the toy truck plus the momentum of the toy car.
airplane, ambulance, bike, bus, car, Ferris wheel, gas grill, golf cart, mine cart, moster truck, motorcycle, roller coaster, scooter, shopping carts, skate board, skate, stroller, toy cars, tractor, train, truck, van, wagon, water wheel, wheel chair,
No.
If a car and a truck are traveling at the same speed, the truck would have more momentum because it has a greater mass.