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Multiply by a value in seconds, that way you find out the distance. The distance will be in metres which will be travelled in a certain amount of seconds
Distance divided by velocity = time
speed=distance/time taken 600/10= 60m/s
"Magnitude" is the size or distance. Its measure depends on the metric that is defined on the relevant space.
The formula to find the distance of a light year is (speed of light) x (number of seconds in a year). The speed of light is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second, and there are about 31,536,000 seconds in a year. Multiplying these two values will give you the distance of a light year, which is approximately 9.46 trillion kilometers or 5.88 trillion miles.
Use a landmark along the side of the road. As the car in front of you passes it start counting. When you pass the same landmark stop counting. The number you reach will be the number of seconds (provided you counted at the rate of 1 number per second.)
Multiply by a value in seconds, that way you find out the distance. The distance will be in metres which will be travelled in a certain amount of seconds
Distance divided by velocity = time
Read your state's Driver's Manual. You will find that three seconds is rarely ever enough distance.
distance = speed x time so the distance is just the speed of the stone x 8 seconds
You didn't specify what data is given. In general, for constant speed, the following formula is important (just use the definition of speed): speed = distance / time; or distance = speed x time. If distance is in km and time in hours, speed will be in km/hour; if distance is in meters and time in seconds, speed will be in meters/second.
The rate that you cover a distance is your speed. Speed is a measure of the distance traveled per unit time. If your units are meters and seconds, then your speed would be in meters/second. To find the speed of something you divide the distance it traveled by the time it took to travel that distance. For example if something traveled 40 meters in 10 seconds its speed would be (40 meters)/(10 seconds) = 4 meters/second
speed=distance/time taken 600/10= 60m/s
To find the average speed between time=0 and time=2, divide the distance traveled by the time (in this case 2 seconds).
"Magnitude" is the size or distance. Its measure depends on the metric that is defined on the relevant space.
The formula to find the distance of a light year is (speed of light) x (number of seconds in a year). The speed of light is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second, and there are about 31,536,000 seconds in a year. Multiplying these two values will give you the distance of a light year, which is approximately 9.46 trillion kilometers or 5.88 trillion miles.
There is no suitable calculation at all on the list you posted with the question.