The shortest it gets is m s-2 or m/s2
To find the unit rate of 325 meters in 28 seconds, divide the total distance by the total time. This is done by calculating ( \frac{325 \text{ meters}}{28 \text{ seconds}} ), which gives approximately 11.61 meters per second. Thus, the unit rate is about 11.61 m/s.
If you divide the distance by the time, you'll get the speed - in this case, in meters/second.
Because if speed is measured in meters per second (m/s) and time is measured in seconds, the SI unit of acceleration is meters per second per second (m/s2). ^_^
50 meters in 10 seconds is faster. you go 5 meters per second in 50 meters per second, and you go 6 meters a second in 5 seconds..
6 meters per second. Explanation: After 1 second = 2 meters per second. After 2 seconds = 4 meters per second. After 3 seconds = 6 meters per second.
meters is the distance traveled per unit time per second. Mileage = meters Time = seconds
The MKS (meter-kilogram-second) unit of velocity is meters per second (m/s). It represents the distance traveled in meters per unit of time in seconds.
Just divide the distance (in meters) by the time (in seconds).
To find the unit rate of 325 meters in 28 seconds, divide the total distance by the total time. This is done by calculating ( \frac{325 \text{ meters}}{28 \text{ seconds}} ), which gives approximately 11.61 meters per second. Thus, the unit rate is about 11.61 m/s.
Yes, it is approx 14.1 ms-1 or 0.071 seconds per metre.
12 meters in 28 seconds = 12/28 or 0.428 meters per second
Divide total meters by total seconds to get meters per second
Although many people use 'secs' as the abbreviation, according to the rules of the metric system, the correct abbreviation is simply a lower-case 's' for second or seconds, e.g. 10s 30s 1s 0.023s (Using an apostrophe in any of the above examples is incorrect.) In everyday writing, use these instead: 10 seconds 30 seconds one second or 1 second 0.023 seconds or 23 thousandths of a second Examples of when it's okay to use "s" for seconds: m/s = meters per seconds ms = milliseconds mg/kg/s = milligrams per kilogram per second u/s = units per second
If you divide the distance by the time, you'll get the speed - in this case, in meters/second.
ms
Because if speed is measured in meters per second (m/s) and time is measured in seconds, the SI unit of acceleration is meters per second per second (m/s2). ^_^
Distance: Meters (or metres) Speed & velocity (meters per second). velocity also needs a direction but that isn't defined by SI units.