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It will divide by two i think

Indeed:

Speed = Distance/(Time)

Speed/2=Distance/(2*Time)

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Q: What happens to speed if you take twice as long to cover the same distance?
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What happens if the distance is doubled or halved?

Then it takes twice as much time, or half as much time, respectively, to cover it, provided that the speed never changes.


As a vehicles speed increases what happens to stopping distance?

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Why does kinetic energy quadruple if speed doubles?

Work (which is a type of energy transfer) = force x distance.Look at the formulae for acceleration. The relevant formula in this case (simplified for the case that the initial speed is zero) is: Distance = (1/2) acceleration time squared Let's keep the acceleration constant. Note that this will also make the force constant. In this case, in twice the time your object will move four times the distance. Note that at constant acceleration, in twice the time you get twice the speed (assuming that you start at speed = 0). Combining all of the above, to get twice the speed, you need to apply the same acceleration (and therefore, the same force) over FOUR times the distance. As a result, the amount of work required to achieve this acceleration will also increase by a factor four. Or in general, it will scale with the square of the speed.


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When was Twice the Speed of Life created?

Twice the Speed of Life was created on 2004-10-26.


How many hours would it take to drive 136 miles?

It depends on how fast you are going. If all highway at 65 mph, about 2 hours. If all back roads at 35 mph, about twice as long distance = speed x time time = distance/speed


How does the planets distance from the sun affect its conditions?

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