Physics, asked by sundushera8, 1 month ago

How does the kinetic energy of a body change if its momentum is doubled?​

Answers

Answered by advalokpandey001
2

Answer:

Kinetic energy is directly proportional to the squared of the velocity. This means that when momentum is doubled, mass remaining constant, velocity is doubled, as a result now kinetic energy becomes four times greater than the original value.

Answered by abdeshsahoo91
0

Answer:

Kinetic energy is directly proportional to the squared of the velocity. This means that when momentum is doubled, mass remaining constant, velocity is doubled, as a result now kinetic energy becomes four times greater than the original value.

Explanation:

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