Is Momentum the Reason Behind Inertia?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion explores the relationship between momentum and inertia, questioning whether momentum can be considered the reason behind inertia. Participants examine the definitions and implications of both concepts, considering their roles in motion and resistance to change.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that momentum explains inertia, proposing that inertia is the tendency of an object to maintain its state of motion while momentum is what keeps it moving.
  • Another participant agrees that inertia is resistance to motion and posits that momentum can be viewed as a measure of inertia.
  • Some participants assert that mass is the primary measure of inertia, while others argue that both mass and momentum can be seen as measures of inertia.
  • A participant emphasizes that it may not be helpful to frame the relationship as one being the reason for the other, suggesting that momentum encompasses inertia within its broader definition.
  • There is a suggestion that inertia is a concept created to explain mass and momentum, indicating a potential philosophical perspective on the definitions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on whether momentum can be considered the reason behind inertia, with some supporting this idea while others argue against it. The discussion remains unresolved, with multiple competing perspectives present.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference definitions and relationships between concepts without reaching a consensus on the nature of their connection. The discussion highlights the complexity of the terms and their implications in physics.

rita_sharma
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Can we say that momentum is the reason behind inertia? like momentum explains inertia.

Momentum:- mass * velocity

net force is the rate of change of momentum.

f=mv/t

and

Inertia:- it is the tendency of an object to stay in the state of motion it currently is in i.e resist the change of state of motion.

For example:- a car speeds up (accelerates) but later at some point the velocity becomes constant(assume there is no other force acting on the object).now the net force on the object is zero(so is acceleration) but the object continues to move with constant velocity and hence it has the same momentum (since mass isn't changing and neither is velocity). so no force but momentum is still there.

momentum is the energy which the moving object has right?
when there is some velocity the momentum remains constant and the object keeps moving because of this and when the velocity is zero then momentum is zero and thus the object remains at rest.

here not changing its velocity is the the objects 'tendency' we call it inertia and momentum is what keeps the object moving.

so what i think is:
inertia tells us that the state of motion will not change and
momentum tells us the reason behind it(it is the reason) sort of like "it happens" and "why it happens"


am i right right? or i am confusing them both?
 
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Yeah inertia is resistance to motion; momentum can be thought of as a measure of inertia.
 
momentum is a measure of energy-movement

inertia just says that can't change unless an outside energy hits it
 
michaelc187 said:
momentum is a measure of energy-movement

inertia just says that can't change unless an outside energy hits it

So are momentum and inertia connected or not?
 
Dr_Scientist said:
Yeah inertia is resistance to motion; momentum can be thought of as a measure of inertia.

But isn't mass the measure of inertia?
 
rita_sharma said:
But isn't mass the measure of inertia?

Mass is a measure of inertia, and so is momentum.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inertia

For me, I think inertia is a concept invented just to explain the concept of mass and momentum.
 
rita_sharma said:
Can we say that momentum is the reason behind inertia? like momentum explains inertia.

net force is the rate of change of momentum.

f=mv/t

I think it's not helpful to think in terms of one being the reason for the other.The concept of inertia is subsumed in the concept of momentum.
What I mean is, the concept of momentum as we define it covers a lot of ground, a wide range of properties is included in the definition. The concept of inertia is more focused. The concept of inertia just says that one thing: that a force is required to change the state of motion of an object.
If you accept momentum as something meaningful, you're automatically also accepting the concept of inertia. The comprehensive concept of momentum implies the more specific concept of inertia.

Conversely, the concept of inertia does not specify all of the more general concept of momentum.
This doesn't mean the word 'inertia' is superfluous. It's practical to have a specific word for an aspect of a larger whole.

So don't think of one as "the reason" for the other, or one explaining the other. It isn't like that. This is about language. We have concepts, and words to refer to those concepts.
 
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