Physics, asked by sompoojansreemas, 1 year ago

What is the integration of momentum?

Answers

Answered by sakshimohite26
0
Thus F*dx=dp/dt*v*dt=dp*v. By assuming p=m*v, this becomes v*d(mv). But integrating this would be the integral of velocity over momentum, exactly the opposite of what you wanted! So let's next assume that mass is constant, so this becomes m*v*dv.
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