Momentum is how hard something is to stop. A heavy or fast-moving thing has loads of it — which is why a rolling truck is scarier than a rolling ball.
What's actually happening
Momentum is mass times velocity — a measure of how much "moving" an object is doing, and therefore how much persuading it takes to stop. A bowling ball ambling down the lane and a bullet have comparable momentum by very different recipes: one is all mass, the other all speed.
The deep fact is that momentum is conserved. When objects collide, push, or explode apart, momentum is only ever transferred between them — the total never changes. Fire a rifle and the bullet's forward momentum is exactly matched by the rifle's backward kick into your shoulder. A rocket climbs by hurling exhaust gas down so that the rocket's share of the ledger goes up. Two billiard balls swap their motion through a click. Nothing is ever lost; it just changes hands.
The practical lever is time. Stopping something means removing its momentum, and force equals momentum removed per second — so the longer you take, the gentler the force. That single idea is most of safety engineering: crumple zones stretch a crash from milliseconds into tenths of a second, airbags slow your head over distance instead of stopping it on a dashboard, and you instinctively bend your knees when landing a jump. Same momentum change, more time, survivable force.
- 1Lay a ruler with a groove (or a track of two pencils) flat on a table and place three marbles touching, in a row.
- 2Roll one marble in to strike the line: exactly one leaves the far end. Roll two in: exactly two leave.
- 3Try to cheat it — strike faster, slower, from an angle. The count always balances. You are auditing conservation of momentum by hand.