It tells the time and location of the object that you are tracking at one point in time.
The vertical axis gives the distance of an object from a fixed point - the point of reference - after a time, as measured on the horizontal axis.
No. The slope on a speed vs time graph tells the acceleration.
It tells you that the two variables in the graph change together at the same rate. There may or may not be a causal relationship between the tw variables: both could be related to a third variable which is not part of the graph.
legend
It tells the time and location of the object that you are tracking at one point in time.
The vertical axis gives the distance of an object from a fixed point - the point of reference - after a time, as measured on the horizontal axis.
No. The vertical value of each point (the y-value) tells the speed.
If you want to find the initial value of an exponential, which point would you find on the graph?
No. The slope on a speed vs time graph tells the acceleration.
the x-axies
It is the legend or key.
•Measures each point in a single cycle of a signal relative to its point of originPhase tells you the delay in a signal
•Measures each point in a single cycle of a signal relative to its point of originPhase tells you the delay in a signal
it tells you data
legend
Every point on the graph has a pair of numbers that tell exactly where the point is.-- The first one tells what number on the x-axis the point is directly over (or under).-- The second one tells what number on the y-axis the point is directly right (or left) of.These two numbers are called the 'x' and 'y' coordinatesof the point.