distance time graph is a graph traveled in a graph which shows how much we have traveled in equal period of time.
If you've got a distance/time graph already then you do 1/time which gives you your rate. Then you plot the points as before but it'll be a straight line with distance up one axis and 1/time on the other
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.
Typically distance is plotted on the y-axis of a distance-time graph.
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
distance time graph is a graph traveled in a graph which shows how much we have traveled in equal period of time.
If you've got a distance/time graph already then you do 1/time which gives you your rate. Then you plot the points as before but it'll be a straight line with distance up one axis and 1/time on the other
distance-time graph
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.
you can't....it's merely impossible! Assuming it is a graph of velocity vs time, it's not impossible, it's simple. Average velocity is total distance divided by total time. The total time is the difference between finish and start times, and the distance is the area under the graph between the graph and the time axis.
Typically distance is plotted on the y-axis of a distance-time graph.
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
No. The slope of the distance-time graph is the change in distance per unit of time - otherwise known as speed. Acceleration is the slope of the speed time 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.
A straight line on a distance - time graph represents a "constant velocity".
A distance time graph would show the distance traveled.
Slope of time Vs distance graph gives the inverse of velocity.