| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
AV Impulse Foot Pump - AV Impulse System Foot Pump - DHP Home Delivery dhphomedelivery.com | First Go, Go 10 Go 20 Go 30 Impulse 12 Impulse 9 Heart Rate... sarkproducts.com | nerve impulses - multiple sclerosis encyclopaedia mult-sclerosis.org | Impulse Heart Rate / Pedometer Watch - Fitness Supplies & Accessories -... dynamicfitness.com |
For other uses, see Impulse (disambiguation). In classical mechanics, an impulse is defined as the integral of a force with respect to time. When a force is applied to a rigid body it changes the momentum of that body. A small force applied for a long time can produce the same momentum change as a large force applied briefly, because it is the product of the force and the time for which it is applied that is important.
[edit] Mathematical derivationImpulse I produced from time t1 to t2 is defined to be where F is the force applied dt denotes an infinitesimal amount of time. From Newton's second law, force is related to momentum p by Therefore where Δp is the change in momentum from time t1 to t2. This is often called the impulse-momentum theorem.[1] As a result, an impulse may also be regarded as the change in momentum of an object to which a force is applied. The impulse may be expressed in a simpler form when both the force and the mass are constant: where
It is often the case that not just one but both of these two quantities vary. In the technical sense, impulse is a physical quantity, not an event or force. The term "impulse" is also used to refer to a fast-acting force. This type of impulse is often idealized so that the change in momentum produced by the force happens with no change in time. This sort of change is a step change, and is not physically possible. This is a useful model for computing the effects of ideal collisions (such as in game physics engines). Impulse has the same units (in the International System of Units, kg·m/s = N·s) and dimensions (M L T−1) as momentum. Impulse can be calculated using the equation:
where
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] External links and references |
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |