Yes. Zero velocity is a velocity; if it is always zero then it is a constant velocity.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
a constant polynomial has a degree zero (0).
Zero. In general, the derivative of any constant is zero.
zero
Yes. Zero velocity is a velocity; if it is always zero then it is a constant velocity.
That means the constant has a value that is different to zero.That means the constant has a value that is different to zero.That means the constant has a value that is different to zero.That means the constant has a value that is different to zero.
When the velocity of a particle is constant, it means there is no change in speed or direction. Therefore, its acceleration is zero because acceleration is the rate of change of velocity. If the velocity is constant, there is no change to be measured, so the acceleration is constant at zero.
Time constant in an RC filter is resistance times capacitance. With ideal components, if the resistance is zero, then the time constant is zero, not mattter what the capacitance is. In a practical circuit, there is always some resistance in the conductors and in the capacitor so, if the resistance is (close to) zero, the time constant will be (close to) zero.
An object moves with constant velocity when there is no net force acting upon it. If there are no forces acting on an object, or if the forces acting on it "cancel out" leaving a net force of zero acting on the object, it will have zero acceleration. With a zero acceleration, the velocity of the object will be constant.
That degree is zero.
One definition of the derivative is: "Rate of change". Since a constant is constant, it doesn't change, and the rate at which it changes is zero.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
A zero graph
Whenever velocity is constant, the acceleration is zero. This also works when the velocity is zero, the acceleration is zero. That pretty much means the object isn't moving. But, yes/ If velocity is constant, accleration is zero.
If your acceleration is zero, then yes, you are traveling at a constant speed. The path does not matter. Acceleration measures the change in velocity, so an acceleration of zero means that there is zero change in velocity and therefore the speed is constant.
F=ma constant speed would mean 'a' acceleration is zero thus force zero. The puck would be in equilibrium, and the force would be zero at constant motion. Constant motion is constant velocity including the constant zero velocity.