Speed is distance divided by time so pick the section you want to work out the average for, work out how much distance has been traveled in that section and divide it by how much time has passed for that section.
Speed (in the radial direction) = slope of the graph.
A distance-time graph is created by placing the distance on the vertical axis with the time placed on the horizontal axis. The values can then be plotted using distance traveled on different intervals.
Average speed during the time = (distance) divided by (time for that distance)
Average speed.
The graph of distance vs time increases exponentially as speed increases.
If you graph distance vs. time, the slope of the line will be the average speed.
Speed (in the radial direction) = slope of the graph.
speed is the gradient under the distance vs time graph which is change in distance /change in time
That's not correct. If you have a graph of distance as a function of time, the speed is the slope of the graph.
You can calculate speed by taking the gradient (dy/dx) from a Distance-time graph since s=d/t
Average speed = (distance covered) divided by (time to cover the distance)
A distance-time graph is created by placing the distance on the vertical axis with the time placed on the horizontal axis. The values can then be plotted using distance traveled on different intervals.
The average speed is the ratio between the distance and time.
The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
you calculate average speed by dividing the total distance to the total time.
Assuming it's a graph of speed vs time, then between 2 times, the average is the distance (= area under the graph between those times) divided by the time difference.
To find the average speed or rate of something.(: