A distance vs time squared graph shows shows the relationship between distance and time during an acceleration. An example of an acceleration value would be 3.4 m/s^2. The time is always squared in acceleration therefore the graph can show the rate of which an object is moving
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The dependent variable.
The curved line on a time vs. distance graph represents that the object is accelerating.
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
Slope of the graph will give you speed.
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distance vs time suggests velocity while distance vs time squared suggests acceleration
The slope of a time vs distance graph represents the speed or velocity of an object. It is calculated as the change in distance divided by the change in time. A steeper slope indicates a greater speed.
The dependent variable.
The curved line on a time vs. distance graph represents that the object is accelerating.
The graph of distance vs. time suggests constant velocity if it is a straight line, while a curve on the graph implies changing velocity. The graph of distance vs. time squared suggests acceleration, as a linear relationship implies constant acceleration.
To find the starting point of a distance vs time graph from a velocity vs time graph and a function, you would integrate the velocity function to find the displacement function. The starting point of the distance vs time graph corresponds to the initial displacement obtained from the displaced function.
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.
Slope of the graph will give you speed.
time is on the x axis and distance is on the y axis
Yes. Speed is the rate at which distance changes over time. In calculus terms v = dx/dt, or the slope of the distance vs. time graph. If the slope of the distance vs. time graph is a straight line, the speed is constant.