Physics, asked by mdnehalreza1, 7 months ago

momentum is product of and​

Answers

Answered by dkyadav94
27

\large{\mathbb{\purple{\rectangle{\green{\underbrace{\overbrace{\red{\boxed{\red{♪⫷❥ᴀ᭄n §₩ΣR⫸♪}}}}}}}}}}<br />\sf\huge\bold\red{༄❁❁❁❁❁༄ }</>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.\sf\huge\bold\purple{༄❁❁❁❁❁༄ }

Answered by gopimadhavi276
0

Answer:

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.

Explanation:

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