mass x velocity = momentum.
(velocity = speed with a direction)
That's the object's linear momentum.
Momentum
It is the momentum of a body.
An object's mass and its velocity define the object's MOMENTUM.
mass multiplied by velocity gives momentum.
Because momentum is mass X velocity. Velocity has direction, otherwise it is speed.
Momentum depends on mass and velocity.
Mass (M) x Volume (V) is not the formula for anything. Mass multiplied by Volume is the formula for density. Mass multiplied by velocity (speed with a direction) is the formula for momentum.
-- mass -- velocity
That is called "momentum".
Yes: P=mv (momentum = mass * velocity)
a moving objects momentum
Momentum is mass multiplied by velocity - so it is proportional to the velocity. If the velocity triples then so does the momentum
== == Momentum is the product of the mass of an object multiplied by its velocity (or speed). Momentum is conserved so if a moving object hits a staionary object the total momentum of the two objects after the collision is the same as the momentum of the original moving object.