Anyone who moves in any particular direction.
Unlike the drunk on his random walk from the pub! He may use speed - if he can get his head around the concept - but velocity is probably a too much of an ask.
Yes. Zero velocity is a velocity; if it is always zero then it is a constant velocity.
Well, (final velocity) = (initial velocity) + (acceleration x time)
It equals an undefined entity. The average acceleration of an object equals the CHANGE in velocity divided by the time interval. The term "change in velocity" is not the same as the term "velocity", "average velocity", or "instantaneous velocity".
Velocity is distance / time
velocity = distance/time
A servo motor uses position and/or velocity feedback to control its position and/or velocity. A stepper motor, on the other hand, uses magnetic detents to allow positioning to known positions based on pulses received from the driver.
Velocity Micro is a company that sells custom desktop computers and laptops suitable for gaming and other uses, as well as a wide range of its own Cruz tablets.
Typical uses of vectors include force, position, velocity, acceleration, torque, rotational movement, and others.
Yes it can be!!! If two cars on a straight road head directly toward each other at a speed of 60mph (relative to the road), the velocity of one relative to the other is 120mph. This example arbitrarily uses the road as the reference for each car's speed, but there really is no such thing as "absolute velocity" and both cars would have a velocity of about 1000mph relative to the center of the Earth. According to Einstein's principles of "Relativity" all velocity is relative.
A regular pistol is a firearm. It uses gunpowder to fire a bullet. An air pistol uses compressed air to fire a pellet with less velocity than a firearm.
velocity = velocity
muzzle velocity is the velocity of bullet and recoil velocity is the velocity of gun.
That would be velocity
it's velocity...it's velocity...
Velocity is a speed and its direction. Speed is the quotient of change in distance (D) divided by change in time (T). Therefore calculating speed is dependent on the two variables of D and T, as well as the direction in which the position has changed. In SI unites the measure of the magnitude of velocity uses meters (m) per second(s).
The answer is velocity.
linear velocity= radius* angular velocity