tiny-tim said:
Ok - momentum is the oomph something has when it hits you!
Newton's second law is:
force = (rate of) change of momentum,
so when a force hits you,
momentum is what it gives you!
(Unless, of course, some other force - possibly friction through your feet on the ground - cancels the first force out).
That's quite a nice explanation
rakeshsugirth
P=mv has units of kg*m/s and it indicates a bodies momentum.
Momentum has no force in itself since there is no acceleration involved and F=ma. However the greater the momentum the greater the potential abilty to apply a large force.
So a truck traveling at 50kph (14m/s) has the potential to apply a much larger force than a tennis ball traveling at 50kph (14m/s). A mass without a velocity has potential to apply a force but then it is called inertia. Inertia is only relative to mass, so inertial force is generated when the mass is accelerated.
The truck has a mass of 20000kg and the ball 0.02kg. F=ma so the ball would have to decelerate a million times faster than the truck to apply the same force to another object.
Therefore if the truck collides with a large object (large mass with a large inertia) it will have the potential to move that large object, the ball however will not.
So imagine a body with a large momentum acts on a second body. If the second body has a small mass the second body will accelerate much faster than if it had a much larger mass.
So I say, momentum is the measure of the potential magnitude of force available to accelerate another body that it acts on.
Also momentum is relative. So if you are on a train doing 100mph you have no momentum relative to the train but you do have a large momentum relative to a cow standing in a field watchinching you whizz by. If the train hits a bridge you will suddenly appear to accelerate to 100mph (which was the velocity you had before the train stopped). Now you have a large momentum relative to the trai, which now has an enourmous inertia. When you hit the carriage door at the end of your carriage your soft body will be splattered by the lagre force generated by you rapid deceleration.
But I'm not a physicist so you may want to look further.
Cheers Dave