2000 pounds = 907.2 kg 30 mph = 13.41 m/s momentum = velocity * mass momentum = 13.41 m/s * 907.2 kg momentum = 12166 kg*m/s
What is the momentum of a 2000-pound car traveling at 30 miles per hour? Give the answer in metric units (change pounds to kilograms; miles per hour to meters per second).Choose the best answer from the options below:A10,900B12,120C9,000D13,140E15,000
(kilograms) x (meters per second)That's a (mass) multiplied by a (speed), which is a unit of [momentum] ... kilogram-meter per second.
Momentum = (mass ) x (velocity) = (5) x (4) = 20 kg-meters/sec in the direction of the velocity.
momentum = mass times velocity momentum = .145 x 10 = 1.45 kg-m/sec
100 Kg m/s
What is the momentum of a 2000-pound car traveling at 30 miles per hour? Give the answer in metric units (change pounds to kilograms; miles per hour to meters per second).Choose the best answer from the options below:A10,900B12,120C9,000D13,140E15,000
The mass of a object in kilograms times its velocity is its momentum.
Angular momentum is defined as the cross product of a distance (from the axis of rotation) and a momentum, so you have to use units accordingly. In the SI, that would be meters x kilograms x meters / second, which you can simplify to meters squared x kilograms / second. This is equivalent to joules x seconds.
(kilograms) x (meters per second)That's a (mass) multiplied by a (speed), which is a unit of [momentum] ... kilogram-meter per second.
Momentum = (mass ) x (velocity) = (5) x (4) = 20 kg-meters/sec in the direction of the velocity.
To calculate momentum, you would multiply the mass of the car in kilograms by its velocity in meters per second. The unit for momentum is kg*m/s.
No, momentum is measured in units of kilograms times meters per second (kgm/s), while impulse is measured in units of Newton seconds (Ns). Momentum is a measure of an object's motion, while impulse is a measure of the change in momentum experienced by an object.
Momentum is actually measured in kilograms x meters/second, since it is the product of a mass and a speed. Momentum can be thought of as the "amount of motion", and it is a physical quantity that is conserved under all circumstances, as far as we know.
momentum = mass times velocity momentum = .145 x 10 = 1.45 kg-m/sec
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.
The formula for momentum is (mass)*(velocity), so the SI units would bekg m sec-1 or kg-m/sec
If you jump up, for example, with a momentum of 100 kilogram x meter / second (this can be done by jumping up at a speed of 2 meters/second, if you have a mass of 50 kilograms), then the Earth will recoil by the same amount of momentum - in the opposite direction of course. This follows directly from Conservation of Momentum.