A force of 10N act on a body of mass 5Kg than rate of change of momentum is?

The rate of change of momentum is given by the formula:

force = rate of change of momentum / time

We are given:

force = 10N
mass = 5Kg

Using the formula for momentum:

momentum = mass x velocity

We can rearrange the formula to find the velocity:

velocity = momentum / mass

Since the initial momentum is zero, the final momentum is just the product of the mass and velocity after the application of force:

final momentum = mass x velocity

Using these equations, we can find the rate of change of momentum as follows:

force = rate of change of momentum / time
10N = (mass x final velocity - 0) / time
10N = (5Kg x velocity - 0) / time
10N x time = 5Kg x velocity

Dividing both sides by 5Kg:

2m/s = velocity

Substituting this into the equation for final momentum:

final momentum = mass x velocity
final momentum = 5Kg x 2m/s
final momentum = 10Kg m/s

Therefore, the rate of change of momentum is:

rate of change of momentum = final momentum / time
rate of change of momentum = 10Kg m/s / time

The rate of change of momentum is equal to the force applied to an object. In this case, the force is 10N. The rate of change of momentum can be calculated using the formula:

Rate of change of momentum = Force

So, the rate of change of momentum is 10N.