stade and dedue the prirciple of conservation of momortum
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- In physics and chemistry, the law of conservation of momentum (or the law of conservation of linear momentum) states that the momentum of an isolated system remains constant. Momentum is therefore said to be conserved over time;[1] that is, momentum is neither created nor destroyed, only transformed or transferred from one form to another.
- The law of conservation of momentum can be rigorously proven by Noether's theorem.
- For systems that do not have space translation symmetry, it may not be possible to define conservation of momentum. Examples of these types of systems include curved spacetimes in general relativity or time crystals in condensed matter physics.
- The law of conservation of momentum (quantitas motus) was first formulated by René Descartes
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