The unclear information given suggests that the coordinate is (-4, 0)
Both coordinates are negative in this case.
They are called the coordinates. More specifically, the one measuring the distance in the horizontal direction is the abscissa, the one in the vertical direction is the ordinate.
The coordinates must be as follows: First quadrant: positive, positive Second quadrant: negative, positive Third quadrant: negative, negative Fourth quadrant: positive, negative
The coordinate n-space usually consists of n mutually perpendicular axis which all meet at a point called the origin. The coordinates of any point are the distances of the point along the directions of each of these axes, in order. In 2-dimensional space, for example, there are two axes which are conventionally called the x and y axis. The x-axis is horizontal and the y-axis is vertical. The coordinates of any point are the ordered pair consisting of the distance of the point from the origin in the horizontal direction and the vertical direction. In 3-dimensional space, there are 3 axes, and so on.
Displacement includes the distance between the starting and ending points and the direction in which you travel.
Yes it can. If distance and displacement is positive then it means it's going forwards. If you get a distance or displacement that is negative then means it's going the other direction, backwards.
Both coordinates are negative in this case.
The coordinate plane in 2-dimensional space has one point which is the origin. This point is usually denoted by the letter O and has coordinates (0, 0). There are usually two mutually perpendicular axes - one horizontal and one vertical. The first coordinate of any point is the distance of the point, in the horizontal direction, from the vertical axis. The second is its distance, in the vertical direction, from the horizontal axis. In space with 3 or more dimensions the coordinates are defined in an analogous manner.
the velocity and acceleration Not really. The direction is implied by the description of the distance axis, so as you go to the right on the graph it represents greater distance from the point which you have chosen to represent your point of reference. So you could define it for example as the distance east of your start point, or the distance north from your start point, or just the distance in any direction etc. If your description does not specify a direction, then all you can say is how far from the start you are, with no other information on compass direction etc.
They are called the coordinates. More specifically, the one measuring the distance in the horizontal direction is the abscissa, the one in the vertical direction is the ordinate.
An object's position change is described in terms of a reference point by measuring the distance and direction the object has moved from that reference point. This can be done using coordinates, vectors, or distance measurements relative to the reference point.
the distance from the origin
A specific location in space can be identified by its coordinates, which can include its distance from a reference point and its direction relative to other objects. Astronomers often use celestial coordinates such as right ascension and declination to pinpoint the location of celestial objects in the sky.
To specify the position of an object completely, you need to provide both the distance from a reference point (location along a coordinate axis) and the direction from that reference point. This can be done using a coordinate system such as Cartesian coordinates or polar coordinates.
The coordinates must be as follows: First quadrant: positive, positive Second quadrant: negative, positive Third quadrant: negative, negative Fourth quadrant: positive, negative
The coordinate n-space usually consists of n mutually perpendicular axis which all meet at a point called the origin. The coordinates of any point are the distances of the point along the directions of each of these axes, in order. In 2-dimensional space, for example, there are two axes which are conventionally called the x and y axis. The x-axis is horizontal and the y-axis is vertical. The coordinates of any point are the ordered pair consisting of the distance of the point from the origin in the horizontal direction and the vertical direction. In 3-dimensional space, there are 3 axes, and so on.
Distance and direction from a reference point is called displacement. Displacement is a vector quantity that represents the change in position of an object in a specific direction from a reference point.