Oh, dude, a horizontal line on a displacement-time graph represents an object standing still, not moving an inch. It's like when you're binge-watching Netflix and you haven't moved from the couch in hours - that's your horizontal line right there. So, yeah, it basically means zero movement, just chillin'.
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Oh, a horizontal line on a displacement-time graph means that the object is not moving. It's like a moment of peaceful stillness in the hustle and bustle of life. Embrace those moments of rest and reflection, just like how the object is taking a little break on the graph.
That the body, whose motion is being plotted is not moving radially.
It can be moving along a circle with the origin as the centre at any speed but that does not show up in a displacement-time graph.
Well, darling, a horizontal line on a displacement-time graph represents an object that is not moving at all. It's as simple as that. No fancy footwork needed to understand that one.
constant speed
it depends on what the graph is. if it is a distance vs time graph, the line will be a line with the slope being the speed/total time if it is a speed vs. time graph, the line will be horizontal at y=the speed if it is an acceleration vs time graph, the line will be horizontal at y=0
On a typical graph, the vertical line is the y-axis, they horizontal line is the x-axis.
It is a horizontal line.
An horizontal line . A line parallel with the x-axis. NB A vertical line / a slope parallel with the y-axis is described as 'undefined'.