The average speed
If I understand the question correctly.......... Average speed can be calculated by dividing displacement by time (scalar) but once you refer to direction and "velocity" you are into a different paradigm (vector) and it is not as simple as dividing displacement by time
Average speed may be calculated by dividing the length of the track by the time it takes to complete one circuit.
Average speed = distance/time
speed = distance/time = 2.8mi/30min = 0.09mi/min
you calculate average speed by dividing the total distance to the total time.
Speed gives the information that how fast a certain object is moving and it can be calculated by dividing distance with time in which that distance is covered
True . A+
true
Average speed is calculated by dividing the total distance covered divided by the time taken. Instantaneous speed is calculated as the derivative of displacement with respect to time.
It is the inverse of that: you divide distance by time to find speed (rate of movement). Some common units are meters per sec (m/sec) and miles per hour (mph).
Distance = rate*time. Thusly we can calculatae the speed an object is traveling if we know how far and in what length of time the object has traveled.
You can get speed or velocity by dividing distance moved, by the time it takes to move that distance.
The speed of an object can be found by dividing the distance travelled by the object by the time taken for the object to travel that distance. Speed=Distance/Time
Average speed.
By drawing a tangent to the slope and dividing the perpendicular distance by base distance.
The average speed