The information given by the slope of ("on") a distance-time graph is the SPEED. The size ("magnitude") of the slope is the size of the speed and the units of the distance axis are divided by the units on the time axis to give the units of the speed ... so if your distance is in miles and time is in hours then your speed will be in miles per ("divided by") hours (mph)... but if distance is in metres and time is in seconds then the speed is in metre per second (m/s).
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A velocity/time graph provides information about acceleration, displacement and distance
It gives the velocity of the object in the radial direction. The graph gives no information whtsoever about motion in a transverse direction.
A position time graph can show you velocity. As time changes, so does position, and the velocity of the object can be determined. For a speed time graph, you can derive acceleration. As time changes, so does velocity, and the acceleration of the object can be determined.If you are plotting velocity (speed) versus time, the slope is the acceleration.
No, acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It is the derivative of the velocity function, not the slope of the velocity vs. time graph. The slope of the velocity vs. time graph represents the rate of change of velocity, not acceleration.
The slope of a velocity vs temperature graph represents the change in velocity per unit change in temperature. It provides information on how velocity changes in response to changes in temperature.
The slope of a line on a velocity-time graph is acceleration.
When velocity is changing, the slope of the position versus time graph represents the velocity at that particular moment. The slope becomes steeper when velocity is increasing and shallower when velocity is decreasing. A horizontal line indicates zero velocity.