No. The total distance traveled divided by constant speed is the time interval.
No. If you divide a distance by a speed, you get a time, not a speed. For example, (meters) / (meters/second) = (seconds).
No. The average speed would be the distance traveled divided by the elapsed time.
Speed describes the distance traveled by an object divided by the time in which the distance was traveled, if the direction is not specified.
The object's total distance traveled divided by the total time it traveled is its average speed.
It is the speed, which must be maintained at a constant value.
Distance/time = speed
Speed = (distance traveled) divided by (time for that distance)
In physics, total distance/TIME is average speed, so this is false. Velocity should be switched out with TIME.
The equation for constant speed is distance = speed x time, where distance is the total distance traveled, speed is the constant speed at which the object is moving, and time is the duration of travel.
this will result in speed
speed
Average speed = (distance traveled) divided by (time for the trip).