velocity=5 meters/sec
Velocity=change in distance/change in time
velocity=m/s
change in distance=meters
change in time=sec
v=x/t
v=100m/20s
v=5m/s
Its final velocity, the distance covered.
velocity = distance / time There are also some formulae involving acceleration; for example, in the case of constant acceleration: velocity = initial velocity + acceleration x time If the acceleration is not constant, an integral is used instead.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
There is not enough information to answer the question. The answer depends onis the object travelling at constant velocity?is the acceleration constant?If it is an object travelling with constant acceleration, which three of the following four variables are knows: initaial velocity, final velocity, acceleration and time.
You mean how are they related? Sting from rest condition, let V = velocity, T = time, S = distance, A = acceleration V = AT S = 1/2 AT^2 If there is no acceleration, at constant velocity S = VT
Acceleration means speeding up or slowing down, a change in velocity. Since the velocity was constant, the acceleration was. 0
Its final velocity, the distance covered.
velocity = distance / time There are also some formulae involving acceleration; for example, in the case of constant acceleration: velocity = initial velocity + acceleration x time If the acceleration is not constant, an integral is used instead.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
There is not enough information to answer the question. The answer depends onis the object travelling at constant velocity?is the acceleration constant?If it is an object travelling with constant acceleration, which three of the following four variables are knows: initaial velocity, final velocity, acceleration and time.
"Acceleration" means change of velocity. If velocity is constant, then acceleration is zero.
Yes. If a body has a constant velocity there is no acceleration, but if the velocity is changing there is acceleration present.
If the velocity is constant then there is no acceleration. The acceleration is zero.
It is acceleration. The difference between final velocity and initial velocity, divided by the time is the AVERAGE acceleration. Remember, though that velocity is a vector. So if you are going round in a circle at a constant speed, your direction of motion is changing continuously and so you are always accelerating!
You mean how are they related? Sting from rest condition, let V = velocity, T = time, S = distance, A = acceleration V = AT S = 1/2 AT^2 If there is no acceleration, at constant velocity S = VT
No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.
No it cannot. It is either one or the other. For constant velocity, acceleration must be 0, meaning there is no acceleration happening here. If there is constant acceleration, then the velocity is constantly changing.