the answer is...i have the W.S....lol...it should be the same
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.
stem-and-leaf plots
The line would indicate motion at a constant speed.
No, because that would imply that the object travelled at infinite speed.
If speed changes, then the speed/time graph has up/down curves in it.
If a body is moving with variable speed, then the only thing you can say aboutits speed/time graph is that the graph is not a straight, horizontal line.
The graph is a straight line whose slope is the acceleration of gravity.
The distance vs. time graph of an object moving at a constant speed would be a straight line with a positive slope. This is because the distance covered by the object would increase uniformly with time as the object moves at a constant speed.
If the Object is falling at a constant velocity the shape of the graph would be linear. If the object is falling at a changing velocity (Accelerating) the shape of the graph would be exponential- "J' Shape.
x and y
-- If the graph displays speed against time, then speed of zero is indicated wherever the graph-line touches the x-axis. -- If the graph displays distance against time, then speed of zero is indicated wherever the graph-line is horizontal. -- If the graph displays acceleration (magnitude) against time, then the graph can tell you when speed is increasing or decreasing, but it doesn't show what the actual speed is.
If the motion changes, the graph might show a different shape, slope, or position. For example, if the speed increases, the graph might show a steeper slope. If the direction of motion changes, the graph might show negative values or a curve. Any variation in the motion will be reflected in the graph.
To graph uniform speed changes, you would plot distance on the y-axis and time on the x-axis. The graph would show a straight line with a constant slope, representing the uniform speed at which the object is moving. The steeper the slope, the faster the speed.
Distance-time graph will show a straight line with a positive slope. Speed-time graph will show a horizontal line at the uniform speed. Acceleration-time graph will show a horizontal line at a = 0.
On a graph of velocity and time, a constant speed would appear as a straight horizontal line.
To get speed from a distance-time graph, you would calculate the slope of the graph at a given point, as the gradient represents speed. To calculate total distance covered, you would find the total area under the graph, as this represents the total distance traveled over time.