Distance= speed/ time D=V/t (capitals are important for distance and velocity
Distance = (speed) multiplied by (time)Speed = (distance) divided by (time)Time = (distance) divided by (speed)These three formulas are all equivalent ... knowing any one of them, you can easily write the other two.What they show you is that in order to find the distance OR the speed OR the time, you have to knowboth of the other two quantities.The answer to your question is: If you only know the speed, then you CAN'T find the distance AND the time.This makes sense: You can have a million cars all driving at the same speed. That certainly doesn't meanthat they all drive for same length of time and cover the same distance, does it ? ! ?
'51.93' is not an equation. It's a number. When you write or speak it, it comes out "fifty-one and ninety-three hundredths".
The definition of speed: speed = distance / time. You can also write this as distance = speed x time. This is used to do various calculations related to speed. The above is actually only valid for a constant speed. If the speed changes over time, speed - or more precisely velocity - is defined (using derivatives) as v = ds/dt. However, you need to have basic notions of calculus to work with this.
You can find those by trial and error. You can also write an equation for the three consecutive integers, and solve it. If the first number is "n", the others are "n + 1" and "n + 2". By solving the equation for "n", you get the first of the three numbers.
Distance= speed/ time D=V/t (capitals are important for distance and velocity
Distance equals speed divided by time. Speed equals distance divided by time. Time equals distance divided by speed
The equation is 60F/N where F is the supply frequency, usually 50 or 60 Hz, and N is the number of pole-pairs.
Distance = (speed) multiplied by (time)Speed = (distance) divided by (time)Time = (distance) divided by (speed)These three formulas are all equivalent ... knowing any one of them, you can easily write the other two.What they show you is that in order to find the distance OR the speed OR the time, you have to knowboth of the other two quantities.The answer to your question is: If you only know the speed, then you CAN'T find the distance AND the time.This makes sense: You can have a million cars all driving at the same speed. That certainly doesn't meanthat they all drive for same length of time and cover the same distance, does it ? ! ?
'51.93' is not an equation. It's a number. When you write or speak it, it comes out "fifty-one and ninety-three hundredths".
Draw a triangle and separate each vertex section. In the top section you have distance. In the bottom left you have speed. In the bottom right you have time. Divide distance by one of the others to get the missing one or multiply speed by time to get distance.
Write an equation of 3/8×112
This is a distance, rate, and time problem, so we can use the equation d=r/t where d is the distance, r is the rate, and t is the time. The equation states that the distance an object travels is equal to its rate (the speed; in this case, 80 miles per hour) divided by the time. If we want to find the time from this, we need to use algebra to solve for t. Doing so will yield the equation t=r/d using the simple process of cross multiplication. All you have to do now is use your values for the distance and speed and you have your answer (which will be 7.5 hours if you have to write the time in terms of hours).
Yes, you can write an equation out in words. This is often done to make clear what the equation in numerals is.
what if selena lives 3/10 miles from school what is the total distance she rides each day? write and solve a multiplication equation to find the total distanceif Selena lives 3/10 mile from school what is the distance she ride each day?
Expressed as an equation, this would be equal to 13x - 3.
Write an algorithm to find the root of quadratic equation