Physics, asked by samarvirk5169, 1 year ago

the momentum change of an object is equal to the

Answers

Answered by shivnarayan85
6

Answer:

Impulse

Explanation:

Impulse is denoted by J and change in momentum is denoted by p.

J=p

Answered by Hansika4871
5

The momentum change of an object is  equal to product of mass and velocity of the object.

  • The amount of momentum that an object possesses is determined by two factors the amount of material moving and the speed at which it is travelling.
  • The mass × velocity change of an object determines its momentum. The momentum change is equal to the impulse.
  • Linear momentum, often known as translational momentum or simply momentum, is the product of an object's mass and velocity in Newtonian physics.
  • It's a two-dimensional vector quantity with a magnitude and a direction. If an object's mass is m and its velocity is v, then the object's momentum is p = m ×v.
  • The term "momentum" refers to "mass in motion." Because all objects have mass, if they are moving, they have momentum - their mass is moving
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