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'.
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'.
constant speed
That the object is moving at a constant speed
A slope of zero or a horizontal line on a distance-time graph represents an object at rest, not moving. This indicates that the object is not changing its position over time.
The straight horizontal line on a graph is referred to as the x-axis. The vertical line on a graph is the y-axis.
On a graph, a horizontal line reprents no change in data.
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
It will be a horizontal line
abscissa is horizontal and ordinate is vertical one
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
Assuming it is a spped v/s time graph, a horizontal line represents motion at a constant speed.
line of latitude. or the x-axis