multiply speed by time.
No, because that would imply that the object travelled at infinite speed.
The speed of an object can be found by dividing the distance travelled by the object by the time taken for the object to travel that distance. Speed=Distance/Time
Speed=Distance travelled by the object /Time taken to cover the distance.
You can find the speed of an object from its distance-time graph by calculating the slope of the graph at a specific point. The slope represents the object's velocity at that particular moment. By determining the slope, you can find the speed of the object at that point on the graph.
deceleration or negative
To know the speed of an object you have to know the distance travelled and the time it took to travel that distance
The gradient of a distance-time graph gives the object's speed.
The speed is the slope of the curve in such a graph.
It tells you that the speed of the object is not changing. The speed is represented by the slope in a distance vs. time graph, if slope doesn't change, speed doesn't.
The slope of the motion graph represents the object's speed. A steeper slope indicates a faster speed, while a shallower slope indicates a slower speed. Specifically, the slope is calculated as the change in distance divided by the change in time, which gives you the speed of the object at any given point on the graph.
A distance time graph would show the distance traveled.
False. The slope of the distance-time graph represents the speed of the object. A steeper slope indicates a faster speed, so the distance-time graph for a faster moving object would have a greater slope than the graph for a slower moving object.