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momentum
[ moh-men-tuhm ]
noun
- force or speed of movement; impetus, as of a physical object or course of events:
The car gained momentum going downhill. Her career lost momentum after two unsuccessful films.
- Also called linear momentum. Mechanics. a quantity expressing the motion of a body or system, equal to the product of the mass of a body and its velocity, and for a system equal to the vector sum of the products of mass and velocity of each particle in the system.
- Philosophy. moment ( def 7 ).
momentum
/ əʊˈɛԳə /
noun
- physics the product of a body's mass and its velocity p See also angular momentum
- the impetus of a body resulting from its motion
- driving power or strength
momentum
- A vector quantity that expresses the relation of the velocity of a body, wave, field, or other physical system, to its energy. The direction of the momentum of a single object indicates the direction of its motion. Momentum is a conserved quantity (it remains constant unless acted upon by an outside force), and is related by Noether's theorem to translational invariance . In classical mechanics, momentum is defined as mass times velocity. The theory of Special Relativity uses the concept of relativistic mass . The momentum of photons, which are massless, is equal to their energy divided by the speed of light. In quantum mechanics, momentum more generally refers to a mathematical operator applied to the wave equation describing a physical system and corresponding to an observable ; solutions to the equation using this operator provide the vector quantity traditionally called momentum. In all of these applications, momentum is sometimes called linear momentum.
- See also angular momentum
momentum
- In physics , the property or tendency of a moving object to continue moving. For an object moving in a line , the momentum is the mass of the object multiplied by its velocity (linear momentum); thus, a slowly moving, very massive body and a rapidly moving, light body can have the same momentum. ( See Newton's laws of motion .)
Notes
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of momentum1
Example Sentences
More importantly, it took momentum away from the Oilers, allowing Fiala to even things early in the second period with a power-play goal from nearly the same spot from where Kempe scored.
But two factors have given it new momentum: Trump's comments about making Canada the 51st US state, and the subsequent boost that has given the Liberal Party in the polls ahead of Monday's federal election.
Sale have now won their past four Premiership matches and go into the run-in with momentum.
Without this crucial funding, we risk losing momentum in our efforts to improve autism diagnosis and intervention strategies.
But Reform UK placed second in 2024 – and now they have the constituency firmly in their sights as they try to show their momentum isn't limited to opinion polls.
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