Total Distance: Distance from some fixed point at end - Distance from the same fixed point at start.
Total Time: Time at end - Time at start.
Not sure what is meant by "calculate them altogether".
Calculate the total time, and the total distance. Divide the total distance by the total time. This will give you the average speed.
Average Speed = Total Distance / Total Time
Wheels have rpm's (rotation per minute) and you can calculate that by using the circumference formula to find the total length around the wheel. If you have a specific distance you want to cover, divide that distance by the circumference to find the RPM. Or if tires have a maximum capacity it can hold, you'd have to calculate the total weight of the car and compare it to the all four or 6 of the tire's maximum capacity to see if the tires can adequately hold and support the car.
Average speed = Total distance/Total time
force x perpendicular distance from a specific, defined point
To get speed from a distance-time graph, you would calculate the slope of the graph at a given point, as the gradient represents speed. To calculate total distance covered, you would find the total area under the graph, as this represents the total distance traveled over time.
The kinematics equation for distance is: distance initial velocity time 0.5 acceleration time2. This equation is used to calculate the displacement of an object in motion by plugging in the values of initial velocity, time, and acceleration to find the total distance traveled by the object.
For the speed of a single pedestrian, measure the time it takes him/her to walk a set distance (for example 10 meters) and divide the distance by the time. For the average speed of a pedestrian find a large number of people and measure the speed of each person and find the average by summing all the speeds and dividing by the number of people who took the test.
To find the distance on a coordinate map, you can use the Pythagorean theorem to calculate the shortest distance between two points. Simply calculate the horizontal and vertical differences between the points, then use these differences as the sides of a right triangle to find the distance.
To find the average speed of someone who stops and starts multiple times, you would calculate the total distance traveled and total time taken including the stops. Then, divide the total distance by the total time to get the average speed.
The equation to find average speed is total distance traveled divided by total time taken. Average speed = total distance / total time.
To find the average velocity when there are two different speeds, you can use the formula: average velocity = total distance traveled / total time taken. Simply calculate the total distance traveled and total time taken for the two different speeds, and plug these values into the formula to find the average velocity.
Calculate the total time, and the total distance. Divide the total distance by the total time. This will give you the average speed.
The actual speed can change all the time. You can calculate the average speed by dividing the total distance traveled by the total time.
To find the distance around a figure, you calculate the perimeter. The perimeter is the total distance around the outside of a shape or figure. To find the perimeter of a rectangle or square, you add up all the sides. For a circle, you can find the perimeter by multiplying the diameter by π (pi).
To find the average speed of a moving object, divide the total distance traveled by the total time taken to travel that distance. The formula is: Average speed = total distance / total time.
Take the distance in miles and multiply by 1.609