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
It is false
A horizontal line.
distance = velocity x time so on the graph velocity is slope. If slope is zero (horizontal line) there is no motion
A straight horizontal one does.
if the speed is zero then the distance versus time line will be horizontal
a horizontal line :)
horizontal
That the object is moving at a constant speed
time is normally the horizontal line
The gradient (slope) of the line on the graph.
The curved line on a time vs. distance graph represents that the object is accelerating.
You cannot. A distance vs time graph only measures radial distance - that is, distance from the origin to the object. If the object is going around the origin along a circular path, the distance vs time graph will not show any change in distance.The [incorrect] answer that you are required to give is that the graph will be a horizontal line during that period. But as explained above, the horizontal graph only means the object has no movement towards or away from the origin, not that it has no movement.
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
If a graph shows distance on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis, and the speed is steadily increasing, the line representing speed will be a straight line.
It is false
A horizontal line.