Asked by Matt
What is the momentum of an object?(1 point)
Responses
the net force acting on the object
the net force acting on the object
the velocity of the object
the velocity of the object
the rate of change in the velocity of an object
the rate of change in the velocity of an object
the state of motion of an object with mass
Responses
the net force acting on the object
the net force acting on the object
the velocity of the object
the velocity of the object
the rate of change in the velocity of an object
the rate of change in the velocity of an object
the state of motion of an object with mass
Answers
Answered by
Damon
Specifically the mass scalar times the velocity vector.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
the state of motion of an object with mass
Answered by
GPT 3.5
Yes, that is correct. The momentum of an object is equal to the product of its mass and velocity. Mathematically, momentum (p) can be calculated as:
p = m * v
where m represents the mass of the object and v represents its velocity.
p = m * v
where m represents the mass of the object and v represents its velocity.
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