momentum

listen to the pronunciation of momentum
English - Turkish

Definition of momentum in English Turkish dictionary

<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
(Fizik,Gıda) hareket gücü
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
hızlanma
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
ivme

Biz ivmeyi hissettik. - We felt the momentum.

Onların ilişkisi ivme kazanmaya başladı. - Their relationship really started gaining momentum.

<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
(Fizik,Teknik) impuls
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
moment

Gün geçtikçe, momentumda kampanyamız büyüdü. - As the days passed, our campaign grew in momentum.

Bu açısal momentin korumasından dolayıdır. - This is due to conservation of angular momentum.

<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
devinirlik
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
hız
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
momentum
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
(Tıp) Kitlenin sürat ile çarpımı
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
{ç} --s (momen'tımz)/mo.men.ta (momen'tı) i., fiz. momentum
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
(isim) moment
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
(Tıp) Bir cismin hareket miktarı, moment
English - English

Definition of momentum in English English dictionary

<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
the product of its mass and velocity
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The impetus, either of a body in motion, or of an idea or course of events. (i.e: a moment)

Their intention to become husband and wife, at first halting and timorous, had accumulated momentum with the lapse of hours, till it now bore down every obstacle in its course.

<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
an impetus
momenta
plural of momentum
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
If a process or movement gains momentum, it keeps developing or happening more quickly and keeps becoming less likely to stop. This campaign is really gaining momentum = impetus
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The impetus, either of a body in motion, or of an idea or course of events
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
"the effect of an impelling force, suddenly and momentarily communicated"
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Essential element, or constituent element
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Momentum is the most basic concept in oscillator analysis Momentum is the rate of change at which the market is rising or falling
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Linear momentum, mv
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
the product of a body's mass and its velocity; "the momentum of the particles was deduced from meteoritic velocities"
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Having the leverage necessary to control an opponent's moves through the use of threats Creating momentum is the most widely-used, and most effective, strategy for the game This situation is also called initiative and tempo
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The product of an object's mass and its velocity
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Mass times velocity; a quantity that determines the potential force that an object can impart to another object by collision
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Designed to measure the rate of price change, not the actual price level Consists of the net difference between the current closing price and the oldest closing price from a predetermined period The Momentum indicator can be used as either a trend-following oscillator similar to the MACD or as a leading indicator
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
the product of a body's mass and its velocity; "the momentum of the particles was deduced from meteoritic velocities" an impelling force or strength; "the car's momentum carried it off the road
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
units of mass*length/time attributed to a body that is conserved in any collision
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The product of the mass and velocity of a moving body
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The quantity of motion in a moving body, being always proportioned to the quantity of matter multiplied into the velocity; impetus
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
A technique often used to make it less likely for a backpropagation networks to get caught in a shallow minima
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
In technical analysis, the relative change in price over a specific time interval Often equated with speed or velocity and considered in terms of relative strength
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The combination of an object's mass and its velocity A massive object going at a high velocity has a large momentum
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
an impelling force or strength; "the car's momentum carried it off the road"
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The property of a moving object equal to its mass times its velocity
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Like in physics, a market in motion tends to stay in motion unless it goes too far too fast Momentum indicators signal overbought or oversold when they move to extreme levels
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The flow of activities and the pace of teaching and learning maintained in a classroom
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Quantity of motion Linear momentum is the quantity obtained by multiplying the mass of a body by its linear speed Angular momentum is the quantity obtained by multiplying the moment of inertia of a body by its angular speed The momentum of a system of particles is given by the sum of the momentums of the individual particles which make up the system or by the product of the total mass of the system and the velocity of the center of gravity of the system The momentum of a continuous medium is given by the integral of the velocity over the mass of the medium or by the product of the total mass of the medium and the velocity of the center of gravity of the medium
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Momentum is a property of any moving object For a slow moving object it is given by the mass times the velocity of the object For an object moving at close to the speed of light this definition gets modified The total momentum is a conserved quantity in any process Physicists use the letter p to represent momentum, presumably because m was already used for mass, n for number, and o is too much like zero
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The rate of change of a share price Hence momentum traders follow rapidly moving markets
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
the product of the mass and velocity of a body-a vector quantity
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
The rate of acceleration of an economic, price or volume movement An economy with strong growth that is likely to continue is said to have momentum
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
We will know that we have 'momentum' when many of the significant problems and issues that the church faces initially have been dealt with and precedents set so that the forward energy of the church is unleashed and focussed on expansion
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Mass of body multiplied by its velocity (M=mv)
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
In physics, momentum is the mass of a moving object multiplied by its speed in a particular direction. Product of the mass of a particle and its velocity. Newton's second law of motion states that the rate of change of momentum is proportional to the force acting on the particle. Albert Einstein showed that the mass of a particle increases as its velocity approaches the speed of light. At the speeds treated in classical mechanics, the effect of speed on the mass can be neglected, and changes in momentum are the results of changes in velocity alone. If a constant force acts on a particle for a given time, the product of force and the time interval, the impulse, is equal to the change in momentum. For a rigid body, the momentum is the sum of the momenta of each particle in the body. See also angular momentum
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
a measure of the motion of an object, equal to the product of its mass and its velocity
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Momentum is usually measured based on the field in the AGS main magnets In this case p = 0 299792458*B*rho, where rho is the magnetic bending radius of the AGS At high energy this is sufficient since the frequency is no longer changing very rapidly with beam energy and the frequency of the RF acts mostly as a good measure of the beam radius Measuring RF frequency is not as good a method for measuring momentum at high energy since beta is no longer changing very much (i e , the accuracy of the measurement must be very good at high energy) For low energy measuring the frequency of the AGS RF at the time the RF turns off is a better way to measure beam momentum, but the radius of the beam must be known
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
Inertia where the object is in motion If the object's speed is much lower than the speed of light, momentum is mass times velocity
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
{i} force of movement; product of the mass of a body of matter multiplied by its velocity (Physics, Mechanics); strength or motivation derived from an initial effort
<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
an impelling force or strength; "the car's momentum carried it off the road
Turkish - English

Definition of momentum in Turkish English dictionary

<span class="word-self">momentumspan>
momentum
momentum
Favorites