Calculate slope as slope=(y2-y1)/(t2-t1).
If an x-t graph is a position-time graph, velocity is the slope of the line on the graph.
It is the average velocity.
The slope of a line on a position vs. time graph would represent the a velocity of the object being described.
If you graph distance vs. time, the slope of the line will be the average speed.
Simply put, a velocity time graph is velocity (m/s) in the Y coordinate and time (s) in the X and a position time graph is distance (m) in the Y coordinate and time (s) in the X if you where to find the slope of a tangent on a distance time graph, it would give you the velocity whereas the slope on a velocity time graph would give you the acceleration.
If an x-t graph is a position-time graph, velocity is the slope of the line on the graph.
No. Slope of position/time graph is speed, or magnitude of velocity.Slope of speed/time graph is magnitude of acceleration.
It is the average velocity.
The slope of a position/time graph is the speed (magnitude of velocity).If the graph's slope is changing, that means the speed is changing, andthat would be accelerated motion.
The slope of a line on a position vs. time graph would represent the a velocity of the object being described.
The slope of the tangent line in a position vs. time graph is the velocity of an object. Velocity is the rate of change of position, and on a graph, slope is the rate of change of the function. We can use the slope to determine the velocity at any point on the graph. This works best with calculus. Take the derivative of the position function with respect to time. You can then plug in any value for x, and get the velocity of the object.
A position time graph can show you velocity. As time changes, so does position, and the velocity of the object can be determined. For a speed time graph, you can derive acceleration. As time changes, so does velocity, and the acceleration of the object can be determined.If you are plotting velocity (speed) versus time, the slope is the acceleration.
Speed (in the radial direction) = slope of the graph.
No, but the slope of the graph does.
That means the speed (the slope of the position-time graph) is decreasing.
I Dont know sombody help me on this an I'm on a quiz (:
It represents the velocity of the object.