The total distance divided by the total time equals the "Average speed" during that time.
Change in velocity divided by time is acceleration, but velocity divided by time has no particular significance.
Distance divided by velocity = time
Speed or velocity can be expressed as the distance divided by time.
Each term in the equation has dimensions of velocity-squared (remember "a" here is acceleration which is velocity divided by time, so "as" is velocity x distance / time = velocity squared).
To find the time when you know the distance and velocity but not the time, you should divide distance by velocity. This is because time equals distance divided by velocity (time = distance/velocity).
The total distance divided by the total time equals the "Average speed" during that time.
Velocity = distance / unit of time
Change in velocity divided by time is acceleration, but velocity divided by time has no particular significance.
No, but distance divided by speedis.
Distance divided by velocity = time
Speed or velocity can be expressed as the distance divided by time.
Velocity
Distance equals speed divided by time. Speed equals distance divided by time. Time equals distance divided by speed
Each term in the equation has dimensions of velocity-squared (remember "a" here is acceleration which is velocity divided by time, so "as" is velocity x distance / time = velocity squared).
It equals an undefined entity. The average acceleration of an object equals the CHANGE in velocity divided by the time interval. The term "change in velocity" is not the same as the term "velocity", "average velocity", or "instantaneous velocity".
A change in speed divided by time is called acceleration. If the acceleration is negative, it is called deceleration. Technically, acceleration is the first derivative of velocity, and velocity comprises both speed and direction. Even more technically, the limit of the delta change in speed (velocity) divided by delta time, as the delta time approaches zero, is the acceleration. Finally, by Newton's Second Law of Motion, acceleration is force divided by mass, so it is also true that a change in speed divided by time is force divided by mass.