Speed . . . Any unit of length or distance/any unit of time
Acceleration . . . Any unit of speed/any unit of time
Acceleration is not measured in meters/second. Meters/second is a unit of speed. Since acceleration is defined as change of speed divided by time, the units are meters/second/second, usually written as meters/second2.
Rate of change of speed. It can be the units for acceleration but need not be.
Assuming that your units of velocity are in units/second Acceleration = (velocity 2 - velocity 1) / time Acceleration = (4.9 - 0) / 3 Acceleration =1.63 *With correct significant figures the answer is 2
Acceleration is the time rate of change of speed. Acceleration = speed/time.
Acceleration is the rate that speed changes.
fat fart
For a start, acceleration doesn't even have the same units as velocity: acceleration is a velocity divided by time, so while speed or velocity have units of [distance]/[time], acceleration has units of [distance]/[time squared]
Acceleration is not measured in meters/second. Meters/second is a unit of speed. Since acceleration is defined as change of speed divided by time, the units are meters/second/second, usually written as meters/second2.
Rate of change of speed. It can be the units for acceleration but need not be.
SPEED only considers a magnitude, not the direction in which something is moving.VELOCITY does consider the direction. ACCELERATION is the rate of change of speed, so it has units of speed/time, or distance/time squared.
I'm trying to answer this question myself but it seems to be the acceleration rate between the spread speed and the spin speed settings - the units are acceleration (rpm/sec)
Assuming that your units of velocity are in units/second Acceleration = (velocity 2 - velocity 1) / time Acceleration = (4.9 - 0) / 3 Acceleration =1.63 *With correct significant figures the answer is 2
You can't convert acceleration to speed or vice versa, if that's what you mean, since they are really quite different things. Acceleration is defined as the rate of change of velocity (dv/dt); therefore it has units of speed / time, or equivalently, distance / time squared.
Acceleration is the time rate of change of speed. Acceleration = speed/time.
That's because you are dividing a speed by a time. In the case of constant acceleration, acceleration can be calculated as (difference in velocity) / time. In fact, that's basically how acceleration is defined. The corresponding units are (meters / second) / second.
The basic formula for acceleration is the one that defines acceleration, as the rate of change of speed: a = dv/dt. For the case of constant acceleration, this is simply (change of velocity) / time. The unit is any unit of speed by a unit of time; in the SI that would be (meters / second) / second, usually written as meters / second squared.
Acceleration is the rate that speed changes.