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No, lines have the same slope if and only if they are parallel to each other.
y=Mx + b m = slope b= y-intercept
Slope: -1 intercepts: (0,1000),(1000,0)
The slope of parallel lines are the same, but the slope of perpendicular lines are negative reciprocals of each other.
The slope of the curve at each point on thegraph is the speed at that point in time. (Not velocity.)
if line's A and B are perpendicular to each other, the slope of A = -1/(the slope of B)
No, lines have the same slope if and only if they are parallel to each other.
No, parallel lines have exactly same slope Perpendicular line have a slope that is negative reciprocal of each other that is if m = slope of line then slope of perpendicular line is -1/m
They don't, they are parallel to each other.
The slope at each point of a displacement/time graph is the speed at that instant of time. (Not velocity.)
y=Mx + b m = slope b= y-intercept
The slope of that graph at each point is the speed at that instant of time.
The slope of a line on a velocity-time graph is acceleration.
Slope: -1 intercepts: (0,1000),(1000,0)
The slope of parallel lines are the same, but the slope of perpendicular lines are negative reciprocals of each other.
y + x = -10Subtract 'x' from each side:y = -x -10The slope is -1 .
The slope of the curve at each point on thegraph is the speed at that point in time. (Not velocity.)