velocity=5 meters/sec
Velocity=change in distance/change in time
velocity=m/s
change in distance=meters
change in time=sec
v=x/t
v=100m/20s
v=5m/s
Its final velocity, the distance covered.
velocity = distance / time There are also some formulae involving acceleration; for example, in the case of constant acceleration: velocity = initial velocity + acceleration x time If the acceleration is not constant, an integral is used instead.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
There is not enough information to answer the question. The answer depends onis the object travelling at constant velocity?is the acceleration constant?If it is an object travelling with constant acceleration, which three of the following four variables are knows: initaial velocity, final velocity, acceleration and time.
You mean how are they related? Sting from rest condition, let V = velocity, T = time, S = distance, A = acceleration V = AT S = 1/2 AT^2 If there is no acceleration, at constant velocity S = VT
The acceleration of the body was zero during this interval because its velocity was constant. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so if the velocity does not change, the acceleration is zero.
Its final velocity, the distance covered.
velocity = distance / time There are also some formulae involving acceleration; for example, in the case of constant acceleration: velocity = initial velocity + acceleration x time If the acceleration is not constant, an integral is used instead.
The acceleration of the ball is constant during any time interval where the velocity changes. At the moment the ball has zero velocity, the acceleration is the same as it was during the time interval when the velocity was changing. This can be calculated using the formula acceleration = change in velocity / change in time.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
No, there is no acceleration when an object is traveling at a constant velocity. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so if the velocity is constant, there is no change and therefore no acceleration.
Constant velocity is, well, constant. To measure it, measure the displacement through a given or fixed period of time. You'll have distance and time. Distance per unit time is speed. Distance per unit time (speed) with a direction vector is velocity. Velocity is speed in a given direction. If something is moving at constant velocity, it is moving at a constant speed in one direction. No changes in speed (no positive or negative acceleration, or, said another way, no acceleration at all), and no change in direction or heading.
There is not enough information to answer the question. The answer depends onis the object travelling at constant velocity?is the acceleration constant?If it is an object travelling with constant acceleration, which three of the following four variables are knows: initaial velocity, final velocity, acceleration and time.
"Acceleration" means change of velocity. If velocity is constant, then acceleration is zero.
Yes. If a body has a constant velocity there is no acceleration, but if the velocity is changing there is acceleration present.
An object traveling at constant velocity cannot have acceleration because acceleration is the rate of change of velocity over time. If the velocity of an object is constant, there is no change in velocity and therefore no acceleration.
If the velocity is constant then there is no acceleration. The acceleration is zero.