Physics, asked by shahfaizmanzoor597, 2 days ago

13.Suppose a ball of mass m is thrown vertically upward with an initial speed v, its speed decreases continuously till it becomes zero. Thereafter, the ball begins to fall downward
and attains the speed u again before striking the ground. It implies that the magnitude of
initial and final momentums of the ball are same. Yet, it is not an example of conservation
of momentum. Explain why?​

Answers

Answered by insha0724
4

Explanation:

Momentum of a system remains conserved if no external force acts on the system. In the given example, there is gravitational force acting on the ball which is an external force, so it is not an example of conservation of momentum.

Answered by JoeNotExotic
2

Explanation:

I hope this is help full to you

Attachments:
Similar questions