momentum
Momentum Category:finance
The amount of acceleration of an economic, price, or volume movement. A trader that follows a movement strategy will purchase stocks that have recently risen in price.
Momentum Category:medicine
momentum
1. <mechanics> The quantity of motion in a moving body, being always proportioned to the quantity of matter multiplied into the velocity; impetus.
2. Essential element, or constituent element. "I shall state the several momenta of the distinction in separate propositions." (Sir W. Hamilton)
momentum
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: Latin; Origin: 'movement, moment', from movere 'to move'
the ability to keep increasing, developing, or being more successfulrngain/gather momentumrn::The campaign for reform should start to gather momentum in the new year
::incentives to maintain the momentum of European integrationrn::Governments often lose momentum in their second term of office
momentum ofrn::the momentum of increasing immigrationrnmomentum towardsrn::the momentum towards economic unionrn the force that makes a moving object keep movingrngain/gather momentumrn(=move faster)
::The wheel was allowed to roll down the slope, gathering momentum as it went
::Pratt, without losing any momentum at all, passed them both and won the race
technical the force or power that is contained in a moving object and is calculated by multiplying its weight by its speedrnmomentum ofrn::the momentum of a particle
momentum
Product of the mass of a particle and its velocity
rnNewton'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.
rnrn
acetokinase bust North Berwick-Milsey Bay Beach craze(2) myeloblastic protein hypokinetic Control group torsatron pseudogalena petaliform Ischemic leucine-tRNA ligase Monte San Giorgio six-shooter coaster lope Osmitrol 15 per cent in water in plastic container Ha Noi - Chua Mot Cot - One Pillar Pagoda heliotropism stomacher situated blet ligamentum vestibulare boulevardier Swiss type agammaglobulinaemia musculotubal canal gastrosplenic omentum Multitasking Hagen Shangrao Cameron, Simon chock-a-block Mehrshahr airports Polyhedron consensus development conference Takhar hotels perithelioma TICOR Limited Associate of Arts lectisternium banisterine tinamides St Teresa's Hospital embryonal area Gottron, H Kirby Cove Beach Minoxidil for women Darbhanga car rental heliochrome console 1, verb Anoplocephala asparagine-oxo-acid aminotransferase Marshall, Victor Kefallinia hotels CALLING THE PLAINTIFF, practice glomerule Sexual bleareye Set Down - Horse Racing haematoporphyria cementodentinal junction Cosmetics - Poker Labium Savage - Horse Racing deoxyribonuclease I accomplishment phenolaemia DIOCESE OF CORPUS CHRISTI Credit Union multicenter studies Daejean travel agent bom campfire Royal Air Maroc flights Borborygmus pars tibiotalaris anterior ligamenti medialis phenolase Urex phosphoinositide marimba Haber, Henry effectual toe 2, verb coup(1) Pohlen Hospital Bravia (Bryansk Air Enterprise) flights codogenic Chaohu seamy usphs Aracatuba Chardzhou airports lymphogenic Spock, Dr Benjamin Le Matin ectatic aneurysm Uprights - Powerboating pulsus paradoxus gamma-anticollagenase Beer, August haemrythrin
The amount of acceleration of an economic, price, or volume movement. A trader that follows a movement strategy will purchase stocks that have recently risen in price.
Momentum Category:medicine
momentum
1. <mechanics> The quantity of motion in a moving body, being always proportioned to the quantity of matter multiplied into the velocity; impetus.
2. Essential element, or constituent element. "I shall state the several momenta of the distinction in separate propositions." (Sir W. Hamilton)
momentum
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: Latin; Origin: 'movement, moment', from movere 'to move'
the ability to keep increasing, developing, or being more successfulrngain/gather momentumrn::The campaign for reform should start to gather momentum in the new year
::incentives to maintain the momentum of European integrationrn::Governments often lose momentum in their second term of office
momentum ofrn::the momentum of increasing immigrationrnmomentum towardsrn::the momentum towards economic unionrn the force that makes a moving object keep movingrngain/gather momentumrn(=move faster)
::The wheel was allowed to roll down the slope, gathering momentum as it went
::Pratt, without losing any momentum at all, passed them both and won the race
technical the force or power that is contained in a moving object and is calculated by multiplying its weight by its speedrnmomentum ofrn::the momentum of a particle
momentum
Product of the mass of a particle and its velocity
rnNewton'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.
rnrn
acetokinase bust North Berwick-Milsey Bay Beach craze(2) myeloblastic protein hypokinetic Control group torsatron pseudogalena petaliform Ischemic leucine-tRNA ligase Monte San Giorgio six-shooter coaster lope Osmitrol 15 per cent in water in plastic container Ha Noi - Chua Mot Cot - One Pillar Pagoda heliotropism stomacher situated blet ligamentum vestibulare boulevardier Swiss type agammaglobulinaemia musculotubal canal gastrosplenic omentum Multitasking Hagen Shangrao Cameron, Simon chock-a-block Mehrshahr airports Polyhedron consensus development conference Takhar hotels perithelioma TICOR Limited Associate of Arts lectisternium banisterine tinamides St Teresa's Hospital embryonal area Gottron, H Kirby Cove Beach Minoxidil for women Darbhanga car rental heliochrome console 1, verb Anoplocephala asparagine-oxo-acid aminotransferase Marshall, Victor Kefallinia hotels CALLING THE PLAINTIFF, practice glomerule Sexual bleareye Set Down - Horse Racing haematoporphyria cementodentinal junction Cosmetics - Poker Labium Savage - Horse Racing deoxyribonuclease I accomplishment phenolaemia DIOCESE OF CORPUS CHRISTI Credit Union multicenter studies Daejean travel agent bom campfire Royal Air Maroc flights Borborygmus pars tibiotalaris anterior ligamenti medialis phenolase Urex phosphoinositide marimba Haber, Henry effectual toe 2, verb coup(1) Pohlen Hospital Bravia (Bryansk Air Enterprise) flights codogenic Chaohu seamy usphs Aracatuba Chardzhou airports lymphogenic Spock, Dr Benjamin Le Matin ectatic aneurysm Uprights - Powerboating pulsus paradoxus gamma-anticollagenase Beer, August haemrythrin