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momentum
[moh-men-tuhm]
noun
plural
momenta, momentumsforce 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.
momentum
/ əʊˈɛԳə /
noun
p.physics the product of a body's mass and its velocity See also angular momentum
the impetus of a body resulting from its motion
driving power or strength
momentum
plural
momentaA 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 impulse
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.)
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of momentum1
Example Sentences
"This track has been good for us and the car has been incredible all weekend. Hopefully we can carry the same momentum into the next few races."
The numbers told the story, with Anisimova committing 10 unforced errors to Maria's three in the opener, and the momentum stayed with the German as she broke at the first chance in the second set.
The Bruins jumped ahead early but couldn’t build momentum.
In a statement, a Fifa spokesperson rejected the suggestion that investment into the Club World Cup was from one country, saying it now had nine tournament sponsors and that "commercial momentum is strong".
Wanting to continue the momentum was a key hope for the offseason.
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