To measure an object's speed, you need to measure the time it takes to do a measured distance.
For instance, if a car travelled at sixty miles per hour, ignoring traffic and roadworks, etc, it would expect to cover a distance of sixty miles in that hour.
Length is a one dimensional measurement of an object, and volume is a three-dimensional measurement of an object - its length times its height times its width.
mass
A circumerence is the measurement around the outside of an object.
For a regular object you measure the three dimensions of an object - length, width and height. After measuring each of these you then multiply them all together which leaves you with the volume of your object. Alternately, you could use a different way of calculating volume: displacement. Put x amount of water in a container with measurement markers on the sides. Then add the object. Subtract the final measurement from the original measurement and you will have the volume of the object.
The area of the object.
it may tell the speed of the moving object
Acceleration is simply a measurement of how the speed is changing, over time.
There is no such measurement. The speed (velocity) of an object is what's called a "scalar" unit. That means that it has this value regardless of what it might be pointed at. In physics, direction is described in terms of "vector". That's the arrow pointing to where the speeding object is headed.
Velocity is a vector measurement, it has both a speed quantity, but also includes direction. Speed is a scalar measurement, it only concerns with the how fast the object is moving, not its direction
It is called "speed." If the direction is also included, the measurement is "velocity."
well i think its Velocity because it means speed and direction
Motion is the measurement of an object and the change of its position over time. Acceleration is the measurement of velocity of an object. Both terms are used in physics. Acceleration denotes an increase of speed of an object while motion does not.
There is no such measurement. The speed (velocity) of an object is what's called a "scalar" unit. That means that it has this value regardless of what it might be pointed at. In physics, direction is described in terms of "vector". That's the arrow pointing to where the speeding object is headed.
Velocity is defined as the rate of change of the position of an object in relation to the specification of its speed and direction of motion. Therefore, an object at rest will have zero velocity.
Yes, weight, or more precisely mass*, does have an impact on force. The impact is something like this: an object moving at a constant speed will have more force than an object traveling at the same speed with less mass.So, more mass equals proportionately more force.*Mass is a direct measurement of the amount of stuff in an object. Weight is the measurement of the apparent force of gravity on an object.
Speed is how fast something is going when the direction in which it is travelling is unimportant. Velocity is a measurement of the rate at which an object is changing its position. As such, in order to measure it, one must define both the speed at which an object is moving, and also the direction of movement.
Velocity is the measurement of the rate and direction of change in the position of an object. It is a vector quantity; both magnitude and direction are required to define it. The scalar value of velocity is speed. For example, a speed of "5 meters per second" is a scalar and not a vector measurement, whereas a velocity of "5 meters per second east" is a vector measurement stating both speed and direction.