Can Velocity Alone Determine an Object's Mass?

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John Clement Husain
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Is it possible to find the mass without force/density/momentum but with velocity only?
 
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John Clement Husain said:
Is it possible to find the mass without force/density/momentum but with velocity only?

You mean, for example, if something is moving at ##1m/s## then it must have a mass of ##7.4kg##?
 
something like this:
An object, with a distance of 1300 km, in space is moving in 100 km in 10 s towards Earth, find it's mass.
 
John Clement Husain said:
something like this:
An object, with a distance of 1300 km, in space is moving in 100 km in 10 s towards Earth, find it's mass.

Why would that determine its mass? Why couldn't a small object (a rock) and a large object (an asteroid) be moving at the same speed?

In particular, all objects are affected by gravity to the same extent. Their trajectories or orbits do not depend on their mass.

You could, however, estimate the mass of the Earth from looking at the orbits of things moving around it or things falling towards it.
 
PeroK said:
Why would that determine its mass? Why couldn't a small object (a rock) and a large object (an asteroid) be moving at the same speed?

In particular, all objects are affected by gravity to the same extent. Their trajectories or orbits do not depend on their mass.

You could, however, estimate the mass of the Earth from looking at the orbits of things moving around it or things falling towards it.
you mean Kepler's Third law?
 
John Clement Husain said:
something like this:
An object, with a distance of 1300 km, in space is moving in 100 km in 10 s towards Earth, find it's mass.
How would that tie in with Newton's Laws of motion?