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distance travelled and time taken average speed = distance/time
Total distance travelled = 20m + 15m = 35m Total displacement travelled=20m - 15m =5m
We always calculate distance by multipying the speed by time. ex: I travelled in 10 min at the speed of 60km/h , so the distance equals to 60 times 10 which equals to 600 km....
Without some knowledge of speed, it is impossible to calculate distance travelled in a certain amount of time. Me, personally, I will travel about 100 metres.
Average speed = Distance travelled/Time taken. And that applies whether the object is going downhill, uphill or is on a roller coaster.
Distance travelled/Time taken.
distance travelled and time taken average speed = distance/time
You need:* Distance Travelled * Time taken to travel that distance Speed = Distance / Time
The distance travelled, and the time taken.
Total distance travelled = 20m + 15m = 35m Total displacement travelled=20m - 15m =5m
We always calculate distance by multipying the speed by time. ex: I travelled in 10 min at the speed of 60km/h , so the distance equals to 60 times 10 which equals to 600 km....
Distance travelled / time taken to travel the distance
Rf=Distance travelled by pigment/ Distance travelled by the solvent.Rf is the distance travelled by a sample or analyte divided by distance travelled by the solvent front in chromatography
The distance travelled, measured in miles divided by the time taken, measured in seconds.
It is the distance travelled by the sample or analyte divided by distance travelled by the solvent front in chromatography.
In chromatography, Rf is the distance the solute travels divided by the distance the mobile phase travels. For example, in thin layer chromatography, if the spot travels 7 cm, and the mobile phase travels 15 cm, the Rf value for that spot will be 7/15 = 0.47
the formula of average speed is a distance travelled divided by time v= distance travelled /time elapsed