No. The vertical coordinate tells the speed in this case. The slow is the derivate of the speed, i.e., the acceleration.
No. The slope on a speed vs time graph tells the acceleration.
The slope of a line on a distance-time graph represents the speed or velocity. The steeper the line is and the greater the slope of the line is, the faster the object is moving.
The slope of the graph line or curve.
The graph is a straight line. Its slope is the speed.
If you graph distance vs. time, the slope of the line will be the average speed.
No. The slope on a speed vs time graph tells the acceleration.
acceleration
The slope of a line on a distance-time graph represents the speed or velocity. The steeper the line is and the greater the slope of the line is, the faster the object is moving.
accelleration
The slope of the graph line or curve.
-- If the position/time graph is a straight line, then the speed is constant, and the slope of the line is the average speed, as well as the instantaneous speed at any moment. -- If the position/time graph is not a straight line, then the average speed between two moments in time is the slope of a straight line drawn between those two points on the graph.
The graph is a straight line. Its slope is the speed.
If you graph distance vs. time, the slope of the line will be the average speed.
No. The slope of the distance-time graph is the change in distance per unit of time - otherwise known as speed. Acceleration is the slope of the speed time graph.
Speed.
Acceleration.
speed