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kinetic energy |
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kinetic energyThe energy of a body resulting from motion. A moving body has kinetic energy. This energy is equal to the work that would have to be done in bringing the body to rest, and is dependent on both the body's mass and speed. The kinetic energy in joules of a mass m kilograms travelling with speed v metres per second is given by the formula: If a moving object collides with another object, then work is done. For example, if a moving car collides with a stationary car, it will cause the stationary car to move. The force from the moving object is used to move the stationary object by a certain distance.
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The exchange between potential and kinetic energies is produced by the energy transfers through the pendulum-like properties of limbs and segments operating in a gravitational environment. Kinetic energies U for all orbitals, and binding energies B for the inner orbitals, were calculated at the Hartree-Fock (HF) level using 6-311+G(d,p) basis sets. Such objects "would attain nuclear-weapon-scale kinetic energies," he notes. |
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