I am not sure what you are trying to calculate. Pressure is defined as force divided by area.
No, It is the average velocity.
Momentum = mass x velocity. If you divide out the velocity you get mass.
That is correct. Momentum is defined as the product of an object's mass and its velocity, not the mass divided by the velocity. The equation for momentum is p = mv, where p is momentum, m is mass, and v is velocity.
It equals an undefined entity. The average acceleration of an object equals the CHANGE in velocity divided by the time interval. The term "change in velocity" is not the same as the term "velocity", "average velocity", or "instantaneous velocity".
No, acceleration is calculated as the change in velocity divided by time. It is the rate at which the velocity of an object changes. Mathematically, acceleration is represented as (final velocity - initial velocity) / time.
No. Velocity = distance divided by time. Example: a body covers 100 metres distance in 10 seconds velocity = 100 / 10 = 10 m/s
Yes acceleration equals velocity divided by time i.e a=v/t and it's S.I unit is m/s2
60 divided by the square root of pi = 33.85137501
The formula for centripetal acceleration is a v2 / r, where a is the acceleration, v is the velocity, and r is the radius of the circular path.
speed is distance divided by time Miles per hour velocity is distance divided by time for a given direction so it is direction sometimes known as a vector. so VECTOR
it is equal to the area of that square divided by four.
No, momentum is calculated as the product of an object's mass and its velocity. The mathematical formula for momentum is momentum = mass x velocity.