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∙ 14y agoAny curved line will indicate a change in acceleration. Straight lines with slope indicate a steady velocity and straight lines with zero slope indicate a lack of motion.
If the X axis (left to right) is for time and the Y axis (up and down) is for speed, it would curve up.
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∙ 9y agoA horizontal line on a velocity-time graph shows zero acceleration. This means the object is moving at a constant velocity, without any change in speed or direction.
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∙ 11y agoOn a velocity-time graph, increasing speed (acceleration) is represented by a line with a positive slope.
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∙ 7y agoA bobsled's distance-time graph indicates that it traveled 100 m in 25 s. What is the bobsled's speed
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∙ 7y agoAccelerated motion is represented by a _____ line on a nonlinear distance-time graph.
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∙ 14y agoIf the graph is a horizontal line, then the velocity is constant, and acceleration is zero.
No, a horizontal line on a velocity vs. time graph indicates a constant velocity, not acceleration. An acceleration would be represented by a non-zero slope on a velocity vs. time graph.
The graph of acceleration vs time for something going at a constant positive velocity would be a horizontal line at zero on the acceleration axis. This is because there is no change in velocity, so the acceleration is constant and equal to zero.
The acceleration vs. time graph for something moving at a constant positive velocity will be a horizontal line at zero acceleration. This is because acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, and if the velocity is not changing (constant), then the acceleration is zero.
The graph of acceleration vs. time would be a straight line at zero acceleration for constant velocity. This is because constant velocity means there is no change in velocity over time, so the acceleration is zero.
The slope of a line on a velocity-time graph is acceleration.
False. A horizontal line on a velocity vs. time graph indicates constant velocity, not constant acceleration. Positive acceleration would be represented by a diagonal line sloping upwards on a velocity vs. time graph.
No, a horizontal line on a velocity vs. time graph indicates a constant velocity, not acceleration. An acceleration would be represented by a non-zero slope on a velocity vs. time graph.
A horizontal line on an acceleration vs. time graph indicates constant acceleration over time. This means that the object is experiencing a steady rate of change in velocity.
a horizontal line
false
false
a horizontal line
This depends on what the graph represents. If it is a graph of velocity on the vertical and time on the horizontal, then if acceleration is at a constant rate, the graph will be a straight line with positive slope (pointing 'up'). If acceleration stops, then the graph will be a horizontal line (zero acceleration or deceleration). If it is deceleration (negative acceleration), then the graph will have negative slope (pointing down).
The graph of acceleration vs time for something going at a constant positive velocity would be a horizontal line at zero on the acceleration axis. This is because there is no change in velocity, so the acceleration is constant and equal to zero.
Acceleration is represented on a graph by the slope of the velocity-time graph. A positive slope indicates acceleration in the positive direction, while a negative slope indicates acceleration in the negative direction. A horizontal line on the graph represents constant velocity, with zero acceleration.
The acceleration vs. time graph for something moving at a constant positive velocity will be a horizontal line at zero acceleration. This is because acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, and if the velocity is not changing (constant), then the acceleration is zero.
The slope of a velocity vs. time graph represents acceleration. A positive slope indicates acceleration in the positive direction, a negative slope indicates acceleration in the negative direction, and a horizontal line indicates constant velocity.