In simple cases, you would put time on the horizontal axis.
Time on horizontal, Distance on Vertical
time, distance
In simple cases, you would put time on the horizontal axis.
You put time on the horizontal axis and distance on the vertical axis.
On the horizontal axis you would probably plot the time. On the vertical axis you could plot displacement, velocity or acceleration.
When you graph the motion of an object, you typically put the time on the horizontal axis (x-axis) and the position, velocity, or acceleration of the object on the vertical axis (y-axis). This allows you to visualize how the object's position, velocity, or acceleration changes with time.
To create a position-time graph, plot the position of an object on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis. Record the object's position at different time intervals and plot these points on the graph. Connect the points with a line to show the object's motion over time.
that would indicate that the object is at rest (static object) :D
The graph is parallel to the time axis, normally the horizontal axis.
The horizontal axis of a typical graph would be the "X-axis"
To show motion of an object on a line graph, you can plot the position of the object on the y-axis against time on the x-axis. The slope of the line connecting the points on the graph represents the speed of the object. Steeper slopes indicate faster motion, while flatter slopes indicate slower motion.
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.