Neither.
You don't. It's a completely different unit, they are derived from m/s(unit of velocity) and m/s2(unit of acceleration).
Initial velocity is the velocity an object begins with Final velocity is the velocity at which the object ends up in Say a car is travelling at 13 m/s and then crashes into a wall stopping it it's intitial velocity was 13 m/s and it's final velocity is at 0 m/s or Say a car starts off at 5 m/s but then accelerates from 5 m/s to 10 m/s. It's inital velocity would be 5 m/s but it's resulting or final velocity is 10 m/s
A. Move 2 m east and then 12 m east results in a total distance of 14 m (2 m + 12 m) and a displacement of 14 m east since the final position is 14 m east of the starting point. B. Move 10 m east would have a total distance of 10 m and a displacement of 10 m east. The provided displacement of 4 m west and distance of 20 m do not match the moves described.
For move A, if you move 2 m east and then 12 m east, the total distance is 14 m, and the displacement is 14 m east. For move B, if you move 10 m east, the total distance is 10 m, and the displacement is also 10 m east. The provided displacement and distance for move A are incorrect; it should not be 4 m west and 20 m total.
No. Velocity = distance divided by time. Example: a body covers 100 metres distance in 10 seconds velocity = 100 / 10 = 10 m/s
Yes, velocity is a vector quantity that includes magnitude (number), unit (e.g. m/s), and direction (e.g. north). The direction of the velocity vector indicates the motion of the object (e.g. moving east at 5 m/s).
The unit of velocity in the SI unit system is meters per second (m/s).
The unit for tangential velocity is meters per second (m/s).
Velocity squared is calculated by multiplying the velocity of an object by itself. For example, if the velocity of an object is 10 m/s, then the velocity squared would be 10 m/s * 10 m/s = 100 m/s^2.
m/s
5 m/s2 east
The SI unit for ANY velocity is meters / second.
The velocity is distance per unit time and the SI unit is m/s.
The SI unit for final velocity is meters per second (m/s).
To find the uniform velocity, divide the distance traveled by the time taken. Velocity = Distance / Time Velocity = 602 m / 250 s Velocity = 2.408 m/s Therefore, the uniform velocity of the object moving 602 m East in 250 seconds is 2.408 m/s.
Acceleration is the rate at the speed or velocity of a body increases per unit time. An object that accelerate at 10 mss means the rate at which it's velocity is changing per unit second is 10m/s. For instance, an object accelerating at 10 mss for 3 second will have a velocity of 30m/s.
Velocity= Distance/ Time Unit= m/s