Velocity = distance divided by time / Velocity = average speed over time /
Acceleration = (change of) velocity divided by time elapsed
Change in velocity = final velocity "minus" initial velocity divided by time elapsed
This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.
Constant velocity is a measure of distance traveled per unit of time at a uniform speed, such as miles per hour or feet per second. Constant acceleration is a measure of a continuing increase in velocity per unit of time, as when a car speeds up from 30 miles per hour to 40 miles per hour in 5 seconds, then from 40 miles per hour to 50 miles per hour during the next 5 seconds. It will then have had a constant acceleration of 10 miles per hour per 5 seconds.
velocity=distance/time for uniform velocity. You need units for both the time and the distance to get a correct answer. Example: the speed limit is 65 miles/hour
Using 32 ft/sec2 as the acceleration due to gravity, it would be 0.0303.. miles per sec.
The acceleration cannot be determined with this information. The beginning and ending velocity needs to be known. You can determine her average velocity, however. average velocity = displacement/time = (9mi - 3mi)/3s = 6m/3s = 2m/s
This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.
Takes her 60 seconds to do what? Travel 1 mile? Travel 10 miles?
To find the distance traveled, we can use the formula: distance = initial velocity * time + 0.5 * acceleration * time^2. The initial velocity is 75 miles per second, the final velocity is 145 miles per second, and the time is 15 seconds. The acceleration can be found using the formula: acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time. Plug in the values to find the acceleration and then calculate the distance traveled in 15 seconds.
The acceleration of the car can be calculated using the formula: acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time. In this case, the final velocity is 20+10 = 30 miles/sec, the initial velocity is 20 miles/sec, and the time is 30 seconds. So, the acceleration of the car is (30 - 20) / 30 = 0.33 miles/sec^2.
1.7 miles per hour.
Constant velocity is a measure of distance traveled per unit of time at a uniform speed, such as miles per hour or feet per second. Constant acceleration is a measure of a continuing increase in velocity per unit of time, as when a car speeds up from 30 miles per hour to 40 miles per hour in 5 seconds, then from 40 miles per hour to 50 miles per hour during the next 5 seconds. It will then have had a constant acceleration of 10 miles per hour per 5 seconds.
velocity=distance/time for uniform velocity. You need units for both the time and the distance to get a correct answer. Example: the speed limit is 65 miles/hour
More accurately, velocity is a change in an object's position in a specified direction with time. So while you'd say in every day language that the car has a speed of 60 miles per hour, in physics you'd say the car's velocity is 60 miles per hour North/South/East/West.
The acceleration of the car can be calculated using the formula: acceleration = change in velocity / time. In this case, the change in velocity is 20 - 5 = 15 miles per second. So, the acceleration is 15 miles per second / 3 seconds = 5 miles per second squared.
You cannot answer this question without knowing(at least the very least) velocity
Velocity = Distance ÷ Time : therefore Time = Distance ÷ Velocity. Time = 265 ÷ 65 = 4.0769 hours = 4 hours 4 minutes 37 seconds (approx)
The object's acceleration is equal to the change in velocity divided by the time taken. The initial velocity is 30 miles per second, and the final velocity is 0 miles per second. The change in velocity is 30 miles per second. Therefore, the acceleration is 30 miles per second divided by 5 seconds, which is 6 miles per second squared.