Want this question answered?
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
Slope of the graph will give you speed.
The speed is the slope of the curve in such a graph.
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.
The graph is a straight line. Its slope is the speed.
The graph of distance vs time increases exponentially as speed increases.
A straight line on a distance/time graph means that the speed is constant. In every unit of time the distance increases by the same amount.
In uniform motion, object travel at fixed and constant speed and uniformly accelerated motion the speed of the object increases uniformly.
Distance you read off directly from the graph. Speed is the rate of increase of distance, so it is the slope (gradient) of the graph.
The variable plotted along the vertical axis is the distance in the first case, speed in the second. The gradient of (the tangent to) the distance-time graph is the speed while the area under the curve of the speed-time graph is the distance.
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
That's not correct. If you have a graph of distance as a function of time, the speed is the slope of the graph.
Speed (in the radial direction) = slope of the graph.
Slope of the graph will give you speed.
The speed is the slope of the curve in such a graph.
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.
A speed graph measures the distance devided over time. Acceleration graph measures the change in speed over time.