Neither.
You don't. It's a completely different unit, they are derived from m/s(unit of velocity) and m/s2(unit of acceleration).
Initial velocity is the velocity an object begins with Final velocity is the velocity at which the object ends up in Say a car is travelling at 13 m/s and then crashes into a wall stopping it it's intitial velocity was 13 m/s and it's final velocity is at 0 m/s or Say a car starts off at 5 m/s but then accelerates from 5 m/s to 10 m/s. It's inital velocity would be 5 m/s but it's resulting or final velocity is 10 m/s
No. Velocity = distance divided by time. Example: a body covers 100 metres distance in 10 seconds velocity = 100 / 10 = 10 m/s
It's 60 divided by 5, Which is 12m/s east. Velocity is a vector for speed, since velocity has a direction and speed does not. Velocity has the SI units of meters per second. So you take the meters and divide by how many seconds to get your velocity.
Yes acceleration equals velocity divided by time i.e a=v/t and it's S.I unit is m/s2
meter/second or ms-1
m/s
The velocity is distance per unit time and the SI unit is m/s.
5 m/s2 east
The SI unit for speed and velocity are the same: meter per second (m/s)
Velocity= Distance/ Time Unit= m/s
Its to do with constant values, the rate of acceleration refers to a constant change of velocity over time, so an acceleration of 10 (m/s)/s is a constant increase of velocity per unit time ( increase of 10 metres per second, every second )Velocity is a constant increase in distance, per unit time (metres per second)
What are the SI units used to measure acceleration.
If you mean what is the SI unit for velocity, that would be the meter per second, or m/s
The S.I unit for velocity is meters per second (m s-1).
You don't. It's a completely different unit, they are derived from m/s(unit of velocity) and m/s2(unit of acceleration).
The SI unit for velocity is m/s. Therefore the SI units for velocity squared would be m2/s2.