That would depend on the type of axes.
If it is an acceleration vs. time graph, then there would be a continual reading of 0m/s/s acceleration, and the graph would be a straight line indicating 0m/s/s at all times.
If it is a velocity vs time graph, then there would be a constant value of velocity at all times.
If it is a displacement vs time graph, there would be a straight, continuously increasing line.
That depends on what is graphed.
If the graph is location versus time, it will be a sloping straight line through the origin.
If the graph shows speed versus time, it will be a horizontal line at any height.
If the graph shows acceleration versus time, it will be a horizontal line at the height of zero.
When a body is at rest , The slope of graph is zero that is line is parallel to time axis which is taken on X axis
A horizontal line.
If the constant acceleration is positive, the graph would be an exponential (x2) graph. If there is constant acceleration, then velocity is always increasing, making the position change at an ever increasing rate.
anything.... since speed and/or direction are changing (and not necessarily at a constant rate), the graph can look like pretty much anything
you do not all you do is look and
A line angled upward
a horizontal line
At constant speed, the distance/time graph is a straight line, whose slope is equal to the speed.
The straight horizontal line on the graph says: "Whatever time you look at, the speed is always the same". This is the graph of an object moving with constant speed.
A straight line.
That kind of depends on what is being graphed. -- On a graph of acceleration vs time, the graph is a straight line that lays right on top of the x-axis, because the acceleration is a constant zero. -- On a graph of speed vs time, constant speed is a horizontal line, parallel to the x-axis. -- On a graph of distance vs time, constant speed is a straight line with a positive slope; that is, it rises as it progresses toward the right.
The x-t graph can't tell you anything about direction, so you can only make observations regarding speed, not velocity. For constant speed, the x-t graph is a straight line. The slope of the line is numerically equal to the constant speed.
If the constant acceleration is positive, the graph would be an exponential (x2) graph. If there is constant acceleration, then velocity is always increasing, making the position change at an ever increasing rate.
IF something is linear its a line
anything.... since speed and/or direction are changing (and not necessarily at a constant rate), the graph can look like pretty much anything
The answer depends on whether it is a distance-time graph, speed-time graph or something else.
you do not all you do is look and
According to the ideal gas law, pressure times volume is constant. We'll call that constant c. PV=C, P=c/V, so pressure is inversely related to volume, so it would look like the graph y=1/x multiplied by a constant.
A line angled upward