Vertial Speed is final depth minus intitial depth divided by time
Because - for there to be a vertical line - time would have to stand still !
No. The vertical coordinate tells the speed in this case. The slow is the derivate of the speed, i.e., the acceleration.
Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.
If a graph shows distance on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis, and the speed is steadily increasing, the line representing speed will be a straight line.
constant speed
'Vertical velocity' means speed up or down.
The value of the vertical speed at the highest point of the projectile's trajectory is the lowest speed at the maximum height reached.
Zero.
A vertical rectangle street sign is general information. Such as speed limit 30 miles an hour. Reduce speed ahead.
Horizontal . . . acceleration is zero, speed is constant Vertical . . . acceleration is 'G' downward, speed constantly increases downward
Because - for there to be a vertical line - time would have to stand still !
Vertical triangular shape.
No. The vertical coordinate tells the speed in this case. The slow is the derivate of the speed, i.e., the acceleration.
Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.Multiply the speed by the cosine of the angle (25 degrees in this case). For the vertical velocity, multiply by the sine of 25 degrees.
it improves your speed but its main focus is to improve your vertical jump.
No. The vertical value of each point (the y-value) tells the speed.
No. If the horizontal axis is time, and the vertical axis is speed, and you're standing still,Then the graph is perfectly horizontal, and it coincides with the horizontal axis.