The slope of the speed-vs-time graph is the magnitude of acceleration.
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∙ 13y agoExactly.
The slope of the speed/time graph is the magnitude of acceleration. (It's very difficult to draw a graph of velocity, unless the direction is constant.)
The graph is a straight line whose slope is the acceleration of gravity.
If you are plotting distance versus time it is a straight line with slope 300000
The slope of the line would decrease.
speed
Exactly.
exactly
The greater the ratio of y to x
The slope of the curve.
change in speed is acceleration. change in speed is the slope of the speed versus time graph, or the derivative of such.
change in speed is acceleration. change in speed is the slope of the speed versus time graph, or the derivative of such.
The distance versus time graph shows the position of the object. The slope of the line shows the velocity of the object. The velocity is the direction and speed of an object. If your slope has a positive slant that means you are going in a positive direction. If the slope has a negative slant your object is going in a negative direction. If your slope is zero (a horizontal line) that means your object has stopped and is about to change directions. In case you didnt know a positive slant looks like this on a graph.... / a negative slant looks like this on a graph.... \ postive is like sloping up a hill negative is like falling down the hill
The slope of that graph at each point is the speed at that instant of time.
The slope of the speed/time graph is the magnitude of acceleration. (It's very difficult to draw a graph of velocity, unless the direction is constant.)
A graph that shows speed versus time is not an acceleration graph.The slope of the graph at any point is the acceleration at that time.A straight line shows that the acceleration is constant.
The graph is a straight line whose slope is the acceleration of gravity.