Wiki User
∙ 6y agoWant this question answered?
Be notified when an answer is posted
3.61 meters
you doing homework???
900 m/s velocity=meters/sec v=4500/5=900
velocity=5 meters/sec Velocity=change in distance/change in time velocity=m/s change in distance=meters change in time=sec v=x/t v=100m/20s v=5m/s
distance = velocity x time = 15 m/s x 4 s = 60 m
3.61 meters
you doing homework???
The acceleration of the car can be calculated using the formula: acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time. Given the initial velocity (A), final velocity (B), and time (8 seconds), you can substitute the values into the formula to find the acceleration.
(100,000 meters/hour) x (0.13 second) / (3,600 seconds / hour) = 3.6111 meters (rounded, repeating)
a=change over velocity/time 60-initial velocity 45-final velocity 45-60= 15m/s 15/5= 3- acceleration
900 m/s velocity=meters/sec v=4500/5=900
The average velocity for the entire trip can be calculated as the total displacement over the total time. First find the total displacement (final position - initial position): -40 meters. Then, calculate the total time: 10 seconds. Finally, divide displacement by time to find the average velocity: -4 m/s.
Velocity is measured by distance traveled divided by the time taken to travel. Unlike speed Velocity contains vectors, which means you can have a negative velocity. For example if a car traveled to the right 6 meters in 3 seconds velocity would be 2 meters per second or 2 m/s An example showing the vector (Direction) would be a car traveled 6 meters to the left in 3 seconds. -6/3= -2 m/s
The acceleration of the car can be found using the formula: acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time. In this case, the final velocity is 0 m/s (stopped), the initial velocity is 20 m/s, and the time is 5 seconds. So, the acceleration would be (0 m/s - 20 m/s) / 5 s = -4 m/s^2.
velocity=5 meters/sec Velocity=change in distance/change in time velocity=m/s change in distance=meters change in time=sec v=x/t v=100m/20s v=5m/s
2 meters/second or 7 km/h
Velocity is the rate at which an object changes its position in a specific direction. It is a vector quantity that includes both speed (magnitude of velocity) and direction. The correct measure of velocity includes both the numerical value of speed and the direction in which the object is moving.