Velocity equal distance divided by time.
For example, an object that traveled 5 metes in 10 seconds had a velocity of 5/10 meters per second which is .5 meters per second.
Velocity is speed in a direction. Sometimes a navigate or positive number is sufficient as the direction. Other times you will need to be more specific, such as .5 meters per second East or 1.3 meters per second 30 degrees East of North.
Distance divided by velocity = time
Simple, velocity = distance by time ,which probably means distance = velocity X times.
Without distance, you have to know time, initial velocity, and acceleration, in order to find final velocity.
You can't. You need either the final velocity or the acceleration of the object as well, and then you can substitute the known values into a kinematics equation to get the initial velocity.
You can't. The mass is irrelevant to velocity. You need the distance.
distance/velocity = time
Distance divided by velocity = time
Simple, velocity = distance by time ,which probably means distance = velocity X times.
Without distance, you have to know time, initial velocity, and acceleration, in order to find final velocity.
you would dived the distance by the time it takes to find the velocity.
Velocity is distance divided by time. (v=d/t)
The formula to find velocity is: V = D. (VELOCITY equals distance divided by time) T
You can't. You need either the final velocity or the acceleration of the object as well, and then you can substitute the known values into a kinematics equation to get the initial velocity.
Velocity does depend on distance. Velocity = Distance/Time
Velocity = distance / unit of time
You can't. The mass is irrelevant to velocity. You need the distance.
The distance travelled, and the time taken.