Physics, asked by kiranbaskar7607, 11 months ago

If momentum of a body increases by 100% then it's kinetic energy increases by how much percentage??

Answers

Answered by rishabh2328
1
✨Here is your answer
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Let the momentum of the particle be p ,

p = m*v.

where m is the mass of the particle and v is the velocity of the particle.

Now , Kinetic Energy = 1/2 * ( m * v^2 ).

K.E. = 1/2 * ( m^2 *v^2 )/m.

K.E. = 1/2 * ( p^2 )/m.

Now the mass of an object is constant. So the change in momentum is caused by change in velocity .

The momentum is increased by 100 % .

Therefore , the new momentum would be 2*p .

And the new K.E. will be

K.E. = 1/2 * ( 4 * p^2 ) / m. i.e., 4 times the old kinetic energy.

So, the percentage increase in kinetic energy will be 300 % .
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Hope it helps

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Answered by gladson077
0

Answer:

Explanation:

K.E : P^2/2m

100% p increase so the new p is 2p.

So 4 the times increase in momentum. Change in k.e is initial - finAl / initial × 100

:-)

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