time
yes, and the x-axis is horizontal
no, a straight horizontal line doesn't indicates uniform motion
linear motion
The horizontal line represents that the acceleration is zero or constant speed and the line that slopes downward means that the object is slowing down and it is a negative acceleration.
It indicates that the object in question is not moving in towards or away from the origin. However, it gives no information about motion in the transverse direction.
the object is not moving
horizontal.
no motion
yes, and the x-axis is horizontal
no, a straight horizontal line doesn't indicates uniform motion
linear motion
You put time on the horizontal axis and distance on the vertical axis.
That's right, in the normal graphing system of Cartesian coordinates, a horizontal line indicates no change taking place.
The horizontal line represents that the acceleration is zero or constant speed and the line that slopes downward means that the object is slowing down and it is a negative acceleration.
It indicates that the object in question is moving at a constant velocity in the radial direction. It gives no information about motion in the transverse direction.
It indicates that the object in question is not moving in towards or away from the origin. However, it gives no information about motion in the transverse direction.
Not necessarily. If the horizontal line is laying on top of the x-axis, then the speed is zero at any time, and the object isn't moving. But if the horizontal line is parallel to the x-axis, then the object is moving with constant speed.