Physics, asked by bantyray2166, 7 months ago

difference between momentum and generalised momentum​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Angular momentum is inertia of rotation motion. Linear momentum is inertia of translation motion. The big difference is that the type of motion which is related to each momentum is different. It is important to consider the place where the force related to rotation applies, which is appears as 'r' in the formula.

Happy Navratri, hope it helps

Answered by sn05021977
1

Explanation:

Momentum:

Momentum, product of the mass of a particle and its velocity. Momentum is a vector quantity; i.e., it has both magnitude and direction. Isaac Newton's second law of motion states that the time rate of change of momentum is equal to the force acting on the particle. See Newton's laws of motion. Momentum.

Generalised momentum:

The generalized momentum of analytical (Lagrangian, Hamiltonian) formulations of classical mechanics is defined as the partial derivative of the Lagrangian with regards to the time derivative of generalized coordinates.

Hope it helpful for you

mark me as in brainly list and follow me

Similar questions