its uniform.
Uniform.
During constant acceleration, either the object's speed changes at a constant rate, or the direction of its motion changes at a constant rate, or both.
Uniformly accelerated motion is when an object moves in a straight line with a constant acceleration. This means that the object's velocity is changing at a constant rate over time. An example of this is an object falling due to gravity, where its acceleration is constant at 9.8 m/s^2.
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity. Even if an object's speed is constant, acceleration can still occur if the direction of the object's motion changes. For example, when an object moves in a circle at a constant speed, it is undergoing acceleration towards the center of the circle due to the change in its direction of motion.
The velocity increases at a constant rate.
When we say an object moves with constant speed, it means that the object is moving at the same rate without speeding up or slowing down.
Velocity
The acceleration for uniform motion is zero. Uniform motion occurs when an object moves in a straight line at a constant speed, with no change in velocity over time. Since acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, any object experiencing uniform motion has an acceleration of zero.
No, the velocity is not constant for an object in uniform circular motion because the direction of the velocity is changing continuously due to the object's changing direction as it moves along the circular path. The magnitude of the velocity (speed) remains constant, but the velocity vector is constantly changing direction.
When an Infinite Force is applied to the object.
Constant speed refers to an object's motion at a consistent rate over a period of time, with no acceleration or deceleration. This means that the object covers equal distances in equal intervals of time. In simpler terms, the object moves steadily without speeding up or slowing down.
The speed of the object in motion, the radius of the curve in which it moves, the force acting on it to keep it moving in a circle, its angular velocity, and its centripetal acceleration, are all constant. Notice that its linear velocity is not constant, because the direction of its motion is always changing. Although I guess you'd have to say that its velocity is constant in polar coordinates, because the radial and tangential components are constant.