Distance covered in nth second means the distance covered in that particular second . It cannot be more than the distance covered in n seconds which means the distance covered in a total time of n seconds.
A stone falls freely from rest The total distance covered by it in the last second of its motion equals the distance covered by it in the first three seconds How long does the stone remain in air?
"Mean" means "average"= (distance covered) divided by (time to cover the distance)= ( 90 / 4.5 ) = 20 feet per second
At 10 miles per hour, a distance of 10.67 feet is covered every second.
The distance covered by an object in the last second of its motion is equal to the object's velocity in meters per second. This means that if the object is moving at a constant velocity, the distance covered in the last second will be the same as the velocity.
The Wright Brothers' first powered flight on December 17, 1903, lasted 12 seconds and covered a distance of 120 feet.
Divide the distance by the time. In this case, the answer will be in meters/second. If you want to convert that to the more common kilometers per hour, multiply this result by 3.6.
Multiply by a value in seconds, that way you find out the distance. The distance will be in metres which will be travelled in a certain amount of seconds
Time = Distance/Speed = 90.7 m / 65.30 km per hour = 90.7 m / (65.30*1000/3600 m per sec) = 5.0003 seconds (approx)
The dimension for distance is L, representing length. When we talk about the distance covered during the nth second, it should also have the dimension of length (L) since it is a measure of how far an object has traveled. LT^-1, on the other hand, would be a measure of speed (L/time), not distance.
Distance is a unit of distance, while seconds are units of time. The two are unrelated.
A light second is a unit of distance, not a unit of time.
To determine feet per second, divide the distance in feet by the time in seconds it takes to cover that distance. The formula for calculating speed is Speed = Distance / Time. For example, if an object travels 60 feet in 10 seconds, the speed would be 60 feet / 10 seconds = 6 feet per second.