A body cannot be accelerated at 1.8 metres per second since that is a measure of velocity, not acceleration. The rest of the question is, therefore, unanswerable.
Use the formula a = v2 / r, with v = velocity (speed, actually) in meters/second, r = radius in meters. The answer will be in meters per square second.
Yes. The first is a speed (or velocity), the second is a distance.
it is 10 meters per second straight down
Acceleration of the arrow is -3m/s2A = (velocity minus initial velocity) / time
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The plane's velocity at 10 seconds will be 150 meters per second or 335.54 mph
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.
It is acceleration that is measured in distance per unit of time per unit time, or in meters per second per second, as the question asked. The only thing missing is the direction vector.
Acceleration is a rate of change, over time. Rate of change is a velocity itself, which is "meters per second" - so, "meters per second" increase, per second. This is written as m/s^2.
Ther velocity when falling 1000 meters is v=sqroot(2x1000x9.8) = 140 meters/second.
An acceleration is not a velocity - it is the rate of change of velocity. In SI units, the units of velocity are meters/second. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, per unit time - how fast the velocity changes. Therefore, its units are velocity / time. In SI units, this gives you (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.
Use the formula a = v2 / r, with v = velocity (speed, actually) in meters/second, r = radius in meters. The answer will be in meters per square second.
Yes. The first is a speed (or velocity), the second is a distance.
You throw a ball straight up with a velocity of 40 meters per second. What is the ball's velocity after 3 seconds?
Velocity(speed).
Meters per second.
it is 10 meters per second straight down