formula to figure out the rate of change of a line on a graph m= y2-y1/x2-x1
The slope of a graph.
A low rate of change.
The rate of acceleration.
the rate of change on the line.
If the graph is a non-vertical straight line, then the rate of change is constant. If the line is curved, then the rate of change (slope) varies.
The slope of a graph.
A low rate of change.
differentiate with respect to time.
Rate of change is essentially the same as the slope of a graph, that is change in y divided by change in x. If the graph is a straight-line, the slope can be easily calculated with the formula:Vertical change ÷ horizontal change = (y2 - y1) / (x2 - x1)
Slopes give you the rate of change. On a distance vs. time graph the rate of change (i.e. the slope) is the velocity. On a Velovity vs. Time graph the rate of change is the acceleration. etc.
The rate of acceleration.
The slope of each point on the line on the graph is the rate of change at that point. If the graph is a straight line, then its slope is constant. If the graph is a curved line, then its slope changes.
Find the slope of the tangent to the graph at the point of interest.
The answer depends on the rate of change of WHAT? The rate of change of the gas used? the rate of change of the gas left, the rate of change of the range that the vehicle will go? The question is too vague.
Rate of change of the "vertical" variable in relation to the "horizontal" variable.
the rate of change on the line.
If the graph is a non-vertical straight line, then the rate of change is constant. If the line is curved, then the rate of change (slope) varies.