It does. Momentum=mass* velocity. Momentum is kilogram meters per second
The symbol for momentum is "p"
Momentum
Momentum is mass * velocity. Its units, in the SI system are kilogram metre per second
Momentum is the product of the mass and the velocity of an object. It's SI unit is kgms-1. Correct, but perhaps more easily interpreted as kgm/s.
Momentum = mass x velocity, so logically, the unit is kg x meter / second. This unit has no special name.
The SI unit of Momentum is kilogram meters per second --> (kg*m)/s
It does. Momentum=mass* velocity. Momentum is kilogram meters per second
(Any unit of mass) times (any unit of speed) is a unit of linear momentum. Angular momentum would need radians.In the SI (metric) system, it's kilogram meter per second kg.m.s-1 or Newton-second.
Same as the unit of momentum - an impulse is a transfer of momentum. Velocity x mass. Or the equivalent force x time.
Sure. That's a perfectly good unit of momentum. So is (any unit of mass) divided by (any unit of speed).
kg m/s
The units for impulse are kg.m/s. This is because impulse= (final momentum) -(initial momentum) and the units for momentum are kg.m/s.
Momentum is defined as mass x velocity, so the SI units are kilograms x meters / seconds. There is no commonly-used special name for this unit.
kg-m/s
The symbol for momentum is "p"
Momentum