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Yes. The first is a speed (or velocity), the second is a distance.
Velocity equal distance divided by time. For example, an object that traveled 5 metes in 10 seconds had a velocity of 5/10 meters per second which is .5 meters per second. Velocity is speed in a direction. Sometimes a navigate or positive number is sufficient as the direction. Other times you will need to be more specific, such as .5 meters per second East or 1.3 meters per second 30 degrees East of North.
These measurement can not be converted, because litres are a measure of volume and meters are a measure of distance.
Velocity = distance divided by time measured in meters/second, so it would be 48/7 which is 6.85 meters per second
Acceleration is a change in velocity per unit of time. Velocity is distance (d) per unit of time (t). That makes acceleration distance per unit of time squared, or something like this:We have distance/time2, or d/t2Distance is commonly measured in meters, and time in seconds. This makes acceleration appear in meters per second per second, or meters per second squared, or m/sec2.m/s2meters per second squared
Yes. The first is a speed (or velocity), the second is a distance.
Meters per second
The MKS (meter-kilogram-second) unit of velocity is meters per second (m/s). It represents the distance traveled in meters per unit of time in seconds.
The SI unit for length is the meter (m), for speed is meters per second (m/s), and for velocity is also meters per second (m/s).
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.
20 meters per second
Velocity equal distance divided by time. For example, an object that traveled 5 metes in 10 seconds had a velocity of 5/10 meters per second which is .5 meters per second. Velocity is speed in a direction. Sometimes a navigate or positive number is sufficient as the direction. Other times you will need to be more specific, such as .5 meters per second East or 1.3 meters per second 30 degrees East of North.
Your velocity would be 2.5 meters per second, calculated by dividing the distance traveled (5 meters) by the time taken (2 seconds).
These measurement can not be converted, because litres are a measure of volume and meters are a measure of distance.
The common unit of meters per second is used to measure speed or velocity. It represents the distance traveled in meters per each second of time.
The student's velocity is 4 meters per second. Velocity is calculated by dividing the distance traveled by the time taken. In this case, 20 meters divided by 5 seconds equals 4 meters per second.
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity - how fast a velocity changes. Therefore, its units are naturally (meters/second) / second, usually written as meters/second2.