Physics, asked by Tanaycool, 1 year ago

Explain impulse and momentum briefly!!

Answers

Answered by hassaan07
1

Answer:

In classical mechanics, impulse is the integral of a force, F, over the time interval, t, for which it acts. Since force is a vector quantity, impulse is also a vector in the same direction. Impulse applied to an object produces an equivalent vector change in its linear momentum, also in the same direction .

Momentum is a physics term; it refers to the quantity of motion that an object has. A sports team that is on the move has the momentum. If an object is in motion (on the move) then it has momentum. Momentum can be defined as "mass in motion." ... The units for momentum would be mass units times velocity units.

Answered by Anonymous
0

HLO MATE HERE IS UR ANSWER

. IMPULSE

. The product of force and time for which the forces acts is called " Impulse "

.IMPULSE = FORCE × TIME

. UNITS : SI Unit is N.s or Kg .ms-1,

. MOMENTUM

. The product of mass and velocity of a moving body is called " momentum "

. p = mv

. UNITS : SI Unit is kg ms-1

HOPE THIS WILL HELP U

@ RUDEDO

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