Distance is how far you go like the perimeter,or miles/kilometers.It is the amount of space or area you travel,or go.
Example:
You are standing in the middle of a field. Your house is 50 meters north of where you are.
Draw a circle with radius 50 meters.
Any place on that circle is a DISTANCE of 50 meters (magnitude= 50 meters, direction not important)
If you decide to walk home, that is a DISPLACEMENT of 50 meters (Magnitude = 50 m, direction = North
You run in any direction and reach the circle in 50 seconds, that is a SPEED of 50 m/50s = 1 m/s
You run home and reach your house in 50 seconds, that is a VELOCITY of 50 m / 50 s = 1 m/s North
You start from a standing start. After 1 second you are running 0.75 m/s, after 2 s you are running 1.15 m/s your ACCELERATION is the change in VELOCITY divided by time.
By Deena Dugdill
12
No
7 feet.
1760 yards is the distance of 1 mile
Time = (Distance) divided by (speed) Example: 60 miles per hour 330 miles Time = (Distance) divided by (time) = (330) / (60) = 5.5 hours
speed = distance/time therefore: distance = speed x time example: speed = 3m/h time = 6 hours 3 x 6 = 18m = distance travelled
No
That's not a speed, that's a distance. For a speed, you have to specify a distance, divided by a time, for example "km / hour" or "km / second".That's not a speed, that's a distance. For a speed, you have to specify a distance, divided by a time, for example "km / hour" or "km / second".That's not a speed, that's a distance. For a speed, you have to specify a distance, divided by a time, for example "km / hour" or "km / second".That's not a speed, that's a distance. For a speed, you have to specify a distance, divided by a time, for example "km / hour" or "km / second".
Distance is a scalar. But displacement is a vector.
7 feet.
example of analog modulation
The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. For example, if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will decrease by a factor of 100 (10 squared).The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. For example, if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will decrease by a factor of 100 (10 squared).The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. For example, if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will decrease by a factor of 100 (10 squared).The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. For example, if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will decrease by a factor of 100 (10 squared).
Yes. The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance; meaning, for example, that if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will be reduced by a factor 100.Yes. The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance; meaning, for example, that if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will be reduced by a factor 100.Yes. The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance; meaning, for example, that if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will be reduced by a factor 100.Yes. The gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance; meaning, for example, that if you increase the distance by a factor of 10, the force will be reduced by a factor 100.
Distance between speakers
no
speed = distance/time
Example sentence - His children moved a long distance away and we like it that way.
with a meter stick or a ruler