I know in my expierience with law enforcement it's called a speed trap, however, I have never heard of a situation where the person speeding was pulled over 30 minutes later. That is a big gap leaving room for error in vehicle tracking. But to answer your question one police officer running radar may have you locked in as speeding when you pass his location and pass it on over the radio to another officer down the road. I work on a military installation and we have had speed enforcement events where we would have one police officer shooting radar and a another police officer directing the vehicles speeding into a parking lot and another police officer cutting the tickets.
The opposite of expedition (speeding up, advancing) would be hindrance or delaying.
Yes, it is possible, if you have evidence for your side.
If the object is speeding up, the acceleration is in the directionary of the velocity.
It's possible but unlikely. Most speeding tickets don't result in a trial; much less an appeal.
By speeding up adjacent molicules.
Take the component of the acceleration along the direction the object is moving. If this component is positive (the acceleration vector, or the relevant component, points in the same direction as the movement), then the object is speeding up.
Yes: BMW for example has the indicated speed be 4kph + 10% more than the actual speed. But, the odometer is actual distance travelled. They say it's to keep you from getting a speeding ticket. It's not possible to turn it off at the dealership.
Generally not. A misdemeanor is possible, but a felony charge would be considered extreme in most jurisdictions (unless there were felonious charges on top of the speeding ticket).
Yes, a speeding ticket will affect your insurance rate. The good news is each insurance company has different rates. It depends on how many speeding tickets you have had, or if this is the first one. If you have a speeding ticket you may want to look into traffic school to wipe it off your record and keep your rates unaffected.
the main effect of a stimulant is speeding up in the nervous system. (the opposite of a depressant is a stimulant) deprassants slow down the nervous system
Ohio speeding fines are different in each county. They average around 150 dollars or more for this type of violation.
Speeding