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 graph of velocity and time, a constant speed would appear as a straight horizontal line.
I would like to state first that you misspelled horizontal. The answer to your question is Constant speed.
Constant speed..
constant speed
Constant speedThe graph you described is a speed-time plot. If the line is horizontal, that indicates no change in speed over time. In other words, there is no acceleration (acceleration is zero), since there is no change in speed.
Constant speed is shown on a graph using straight lines. The straight line indicates that there are no fluctuations with the speed.
The straight horizontal line on the graph says: "Whatever time you look at, the speed is always the same". This is the graph of an object moving with constant speed.
On a graph of velocity and time, a constant speed would appear as a straight horizontal line.
On a V-t graph, constant speed is shown as a horizontal line.
The graph is a straight line. Its slope is the speed.
I would like to state first that you misspelled horizontal. The answer to your question is Constant speed.
At constant speed, the distance/time graph is a straight line, whose slope is equal to the speed.
A horizontal line on a speed vs time graph indicates constant speed.
If the line formed by the graph is straight, the speed is constant. A horizontal line would show the object as stationary.
That kind of depends on what is being graphed. -- On a graph of acceleration vs time, the graph is a straight line that lays right on top of the x-axis, because the acceleration is a constant zero. -- On a graph of speed vs time, constant speed is a horizontal line, parallel to the x-axis. -- On a graph of distance vs time, constant speed is a straight line with a positive slope; that is, it rises as it progresses toward the right.
Constant speed..
yes