No becauz it don't make sense.
A scatter plot, a line chart, a bar chart are some possible answers.
Acceleration
constant speed
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 ... zero acceleration.
A scatter plot, a line chart, a bar chart are some possible answers.
Acceleration
constant speed
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 ... zero acceleration.
The straight horizontal line on the graph says: "Whatever time you look at, the speed is always the same". This is the graph of an object moving with constant speed.
Any variables can be shown on a graph.
that would indicate that the object is at rest (static object) :D
The dependent variable is shown on the vertical, or y-axis of a graph.
The graph you described is a speed-time plot. If the line is horizontal, that indicates no change in speed over time. In other words, there is no acceleration (acceleration is zero), since there is no change in speed.
It shows how quickly the variable plotted on the vertical axis (y) changes relative to the variable that is plotted on the horizontal axis (x).
The answer depends on what variables the graph shows.