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Originally Posted by marburypointgod
lopez got knighted lol
Originally Posted by CasperJr
some where Mr. fisher just broke out in a cold sweat
Honestly have no clue what you're trying to convey here. Obviously momentum is in play when two people jump, not sure why it's relevant here. Look at the picture posted above. He just straight yammed in his face, full body contact. To me that's more impressive than jumping up and dunking on someone that's trying to take a charge. Brewer could probably pull off that Fisher dunk in his sleep with dude just standing there like a statute, but how many times is he gonna go full-body on a 7-footer?Originally Posted by Kookcle
n classical mechanics, momentum (pl. momenta; SI unit kg·m/s, or, equivalently, N·s) is the product of the mass and velocity of an object (p = mv). In relativistic mechanics, this quantity is multiplied by the Lorentz factor. Momentum is sometimes referred to as linear momentum to distinguish it from the related subject of angular momentum. Linear momentum is a vector quantity, since it has a direction as well as a magnitude. Angular momentum is a pseudovector quantity because it gains an additional sign flip under an improper rotation. The total momentum of any group of objects remains the same unless outside forces act on the objects (law of conservation of momentum).Originally Posted by PersiaFly
Yeah, put up the next screen shot of when he actually put it through the rim.
Momentum is a conserved quantity, meaning that the total momentum of any closed system (one not affected by external forces) cannot change. Although originally seen to be due to Newton's laws, this law is also true in special relativity, and with appropriate definitions a (generalized) momentum conservation law holds in electrodynamics, quantum mechanics, quantum field theory, and general relativity.
- whatever though you're entitled to your own opinion