Right - and moreover, electromagnetic fields themselves store and carry momentum.
I re-edited my post, but you were too quick on the draw, so I'll ask it again
If this is true, then why did you earlier tell me that my guess was incorrect? Here is what my guess was:
If I had to guess, I'd say that the answer is that the loss of kinetic energy necessarily involves the change in the mass or velocity of some other particle.
I know I was asking about KE and not momentum, but here's my thinking:
If an object loses kinetic energy due to heat,
without changing its mass, then its velocity must be changed. Hence, the momentum of this object has decreased. Surely, if conservation of momentum is true, then there must be a corresponding increase in momentum in some other part of the system.
But if the loss of KE doesn't involve the change in mass or velocity of another set of particles (as you implied when you said my guess was incorrect), then there is no necessary corresponding increase in momentum in some other part of the system.
Do you see where I'm confused?
A simpler example is just the one we started with - two objects colliding. Imagine two objects of the same mass flying directly towards each other and the same speed. Total initial momentum equals zero. In an inelastic collision they stick together and the resulting object will be at rest. Zero momentum (and zero KE - the KE has changed, but the momentum hasn't). In an elastic collision they will bounce off each other, but they will always fly apart with equal velocities and in opposite directions. Total momentum equals zero, but this time KE hasn't changed (if the collision is perfectly elastic).
Ok I get this now. It's a useful scenario and I can clearly see how momentum is conserved and KE is not. It will be a useful example to meditate on since it makes intuitive sense and it jives well with my own mental model. I just need to square this example with the concern I have listed in the first part of this post.
KE isn't a vector, it's a scalar (i.e. one number).
But KE is a function of velocity, and velocity is a vector. So how can KE be a scalar?