displacement
A straight line has no vertex.
There are 180 degrees on a straight line.
The straight level line is said to be horizontal.
There are 0.00 degrees of angle in a straight line
when the motion is in a straight line.
Displacement and distance are numerically equal if an object travels in a straight line. However, when indicating displacement, the direction should also always be indicated.
The displacement-time graph for a body moving in a straight line with uniformly increasing speed would be a straight line with a positive slope. As time increases, the displacement of the body also increases at a constant rate.
A body can have the same distance and displacement when it moves in a straight line without changing direction. This means the body covers the same distance as the magnitude of its displacement.
Distance and displacement can be the same only if an object moves in a straight line from its starting point and the displacement is measured along that line. In such cases, the magnitude of the displacement is equal to the distance traveled.
The graph would be a straight line with a positive slope, indicating a constant displacement over time.
Displacement
displacement
displacement
The shape of the displacement-time graph for uniform motion is a straight line with a constant slope. This indicates that the object is moving at a constant speed in a straight line.
The magnitude of displacement is equal to distance traveled when motion is in a straight line.
Yes, if an object moves in a straight line from one point to another (e.g. walking in a straight line and then back to the starting point), the distance traveled and the displacement will be the same if the starting and ending points are the same.