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8 August, 22:55

A 1000 kg car is moving south with a speed of 20 m/s. what is the momentum of the car?

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Answers (2)
  1. 8 August, 23:08
    0
    Answer: 20000kg*m/s south

    Explanation: Momentum is defined as the amount of movement, and it can be described by the equaton:

    P = m*v

    Where P is the momentum, m is the mass of the object and v is the velocity.

    You can notice that the velocity is a vector (so it has a direction) and also is the momentum (it also has a direction, the same one as the velocity)

    so if we have that the velocity is 20m/s south (v is a vector, so i will use south as the direction of the vector), and the mass is 1000kg, the momentum is:

    P = 1000kg*20m/s south = 20000kg*m/s south
  2. 8 August, 23:20
    0
    20000 kg*m/s

    Explanation:

    Momentum is equal to mass * velocity. So plug in 1000 kg and 20 m/s for mass and velocity respectively to get 1000*20 = 20000. Be sure you convert to the correct unit when doing future problems
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