Meaningless question, I'm afraid! Velocity is speed in a given direction. Speed is the distance travelled per unit time (eg miles per hour). "Time velocity" would therefore mean a distance in given direction, though why you'd want to describe it like this I have no idea, unless it was to try and baffle with pseudo-science!
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There is no concept of "time velocity" in physics. Time is a dimension that measures the sequence of events, while velocity measures the rate at which an object changes its position with respect to time.
Acceleration multiplied by time gives the change in velocity experienced by an object during that time period. This is represented by the formula: change in velocity = acceleration x time.
Two different distance-time graphs have matching velocity-time graphs when the slope of the distance-time graph represents the velocity in the velocity-time graph, as velocity is the derivative of distance with respect to time. This means that the steeper the distance-time graph, the greater the velocity on the velocity-time graph at that point.
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.
No, acceleration is calculated as the change in velocity divided by time. It is the rate at which the velocity of an object changes. Mathematically, acceleration is represented as (final velocity - initial velocity) / time.
No, average velocity is the total displacement divided by the total time taken. The slope of the tangent to the curve on a velocity-time graph at a specific instant of time gives the instantaneous velocity at that moment, not the average velocity.