You haven't given us any information from which to calculate that speed.
As far as we know from the question, the object isn't moving at all.
According to mathematics, we know the relation between speed, distance and time . We know by science , speed =distance / time. time = distance / speed. Hence , Time = 9/3. =3 seconds. 3 seconds is the time when a lizard ran 9 meters at a speed of 3 meter per second.
If an object moves 50 meters in 5 seconds, its average speed is 50/5 = 10 meters per second.
This question doesn't make a lot of sense. Maybe something is missing? To convert seconds to metres per second you would need to divide the metres given by the number of seconds used. If all you have is seconds, and no distance, then you are stuck. Metres per second is a measure of speed and seconds is a measure of time. Speed=distance/time. So divide your metres by your seconds to get metres per second.
Your new speed is 56.25 mph
None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.
2 m/s
To get average speed, just divide distance by time. In this case, you divide whatever distance an object moves during the 11 seconds, by the 11 seconds.
The distance depends upon the speed. It is the distance required to result in a time interval of at least two seconds.It depends on your speed.
Acceleration. Deceleration is a decrease of speed during a given interval of time.
An interval is the spacing of time. For example: I ran for an interval of 10 minutes then walked for an interval of 30 minutes. Or each car has an interval of 0.5 seconds.
Acceleration has two parts ... its size and its direction.To find the size (magnitude):-- pick a time interval-- measure the speed at the beginning of the interval-- measure the speed at the end of the interval-- subtract the speed at the beginning from the speed at the end-- divide that difference by the length of the time interval-- the result is the magnitude of acceleration during that time interval
An interval is the spacing of time. For example: I ran for an interval of 10 minutes then walked for an interval of 30 minutes. Or each car has an interval of 0.5 seconds.
Acceleration = (speed at the end of some time interval minus speed at the beginning of the interval)/(length of the time interval)
0.3 seconds
A measure of a time interval.
That's the (frequency of the vibrations) multiplied by the (number of seconds in the time interval)
about 0.1 seconds