By the slope of the curve.
as the slope of the line
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.
the slope would be speed.
By the slope of the curve.
By the slope of the curve.
as the slope of the line
On a distance-time graph, a straight line with a constant positive slope represents constant speed. The steeper the line, the greater the speed. Time is on the x-axis and distance is on the y-axis.
Speed can be shown on a graph of position versus time, and acceleration can be shown on a graph of speed versus time.
If the line formed by the graph is straight, the speed is constant. A horizontal line would show the object as stationary.
The variable plotted along the vertical axis is the distance in the first case, speed in the second. The gradient of (the tangent to) the distance-time graph is the speed while the area under the curve of the speed-time graph is the distance.
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
The graph of distance vs time increases exponentially as speed increases.
That's not correct. If you have a graph of distance as a function of time, the speed is the slope of the graph.
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.
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.