No.
Any body traveling at a steady speed is experiencing velocity without experiencing acceleration. So a for particle traveling steadily at 3m/s, velocity equals 3 m/s, but as long as it travels steadily at this rate, acceleration is 0.
The condition for maximum velocity is acceleration equals zero; dv/dt = a= o.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
You can't. Acceleration is change in velocity. If given a constant velocity, the acceleration is zero.
zero - it is constat velocity. so acceleration is zero50 m/s2 Another : The acceleration is ZERO. Acceleration is defined as the change in velocity per unit time. If the ball is traveling a constant velocity over a two minute period, the acceleration would be zero since there is no change in velocity.
Then you can say that the object's speed and the magnitude of its velocity are constant, and the magnitude of its acceleration is zero.
A change in velocity can be effected only by acceleration. Therefore, if the acceleration is zero, there is no change, so final velocity equals initial velocity.
A change in velocity can be effected only by acceleration. Therefore, if the acceleration is zero, there is no change, so final velocity equals initial velocity.
To make acceleration equal zero. The velocity must be constant. For example, if velocity is constant at 10 m/s^2 its acceleration is zero. The same is true if velocity is 0 m/s^2.
"Acceleration" means change of velocity. If velocity is constant, then acceleration is zero.
The condition for maximum velocity is acceleration equals zero; dv/dt = a= o.
Whenever velocity is constant, the acceleration is zero. This also works when the velocity is zero, the acceleration is zero. That pretty much means the object isn't moving. But, yes/ If velocity is constant, accleration is zero.
Acceleration is the CHANGE in velocity; you're assuming CONSTANT velocity. So the acceleration is zero.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
Acceleration is changing velocity. Zero velocity means no motion. Zero acceleration means constant, unchanging motion.
Zero velocity = No acceleration
At terminal velocity (constant velocity), the acceleration is zero, but prior to that, there is a downward acceleration.
The body is not zero, but the sum of all forces on it is. -- "Uniform velocity" means no acceleration. -- Acceleration is force/mass . -- If acceleration is zero, that's an indication that force must be zero.