i belive that is speed eg. m/h or km/h
Generally: RATE = DISTANCE / TIME -or- DISTANCE = RATE * TIME -or- TIME = DISTANCE / RATE qed
Distance = Rate x Time Rate = Distance/Time, not Time/Distance
d=rt distance= rate[times] distance= rate * times
The speed
distance = rate * time rate = distance/time rate = 100/2= 50mph
The distance covered while traveling at a rate of 50 miles per hourThe distance covered while traveling at a rate of 50 miles per hour.
The number you read on the speedometer of your car is the present rate of change of the distance you've covered.
Distance you read off directly from the graph. Speed is the rate of increase of distance, so it is the slope (gradient) of the graph.
It is the distance covered in a unit of time.
None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.None.Speed is the distance covered per unit of time. If no distance is covered then the speed is 0.
Distance covered in nth second means the distance covered in that particular second . It cannot be more than the distance covered in n seconds which means the distance covered in a total time of n seconds.
During the first hour, they covered (60 x 1) = 60 miles.During the next 2 hours, they covered (45 x 2) = 90 miles.The total distance covered was (60 + 90) = 150 miles.The average rate was (distance/time) = (150/3) = 50 miles per hour.
Speed is the rate at which an object moves. To determine the rate at which that object moves, we'll have to look at a given distance that it covered when it moved, and at the time it took to cover that distance. The distance per unit of time is the speed of the object.
Generally: RATE = DISTANCE / TIME -or- DISTANCE = RATE * TIME -or- TIME = DISTANCE / RATE qed
This question can not be answered because the horizontal distance covered is not specified.
The formula is Distance=Rate x Time (or distance equals rate multiplied by time). When you take this into account, you can manipulate it to solve for rate or time instead of distance. In other words, you could rewrite it as Rate= Distance/Time (rate equals distance divided by time) and Time= Distance/Rate (time equals distance divided by rate) in case they ask for what the Rate or Time is instead of Distance.
distance = rate x time the distance is increased or decreased in direct proportion to the rate or time. If the rate doubles the distance doubles in given time; If the time doubles the distance doubles at a given rate.