Since a billion light years is 1000 times a million, that means that you simply have to multiply 1000 x 22 km/sec, with a result of 22,000 km/sec.
Average velocity is def.ined as the ratio of total displacement to total time taken.
Velocity is in distance/time, so multiplied by 1/distance would give you 1/time. Hope this helps!
The area between the graph and the x-axis is the distance moved. If the velocity is constant the v vs t graph is a straight horizontal line. The shape of the area under the graph is a rectangle. For constant velocity, distance = V * time. Time is the x-axis and velocity is the y-axis. If the object is accelerating, the velocity is increasing at a constant rate. The graph is a line whose slope equals the acceleration. The shape of the graph is a triangle. The area under the graph is ½ * base * height. The base is time, and the height is the velocity. If the initial velocity is 0, the average velocity is final velocity ÷ 2. Distance = average velocity * time. Distance = (final velocity ÷ 2) * time, time is on the x-axis, and velocity is on the y-axis. (final velocity ÷ 2) * time = ½ time * final velocity ...½ base * height = ½ time * final velocity Area under graph = distance moved Most velocity graphs are horizontal lines or sloping lines.
The product of velocity and time yields distance travelled if the velocity is constant for the time in question. If velocity is not constant, one must first calculate the average velocity over a given time period before multiplying it by the time involved.
Final velocity = Initial velocity +(acceleration * time)
Velocity does depend on distance. Velocity = Distance/Time
Velocity = distance / unit of time
Simple, velocity = distance by time ,which probably means distance = velocity X times.
distance/velocity = time
Velocity includes direction. And it's the 'difference', not the 'distance'.
velocity = distance travelled/time taken to travel that distance
velocity = distance/time
velocity = distance/time
Velocity is distance / time
Distance Traveled is directly proportional to velocity. This is because velocity is the change in position over a period of time. The greater the velocity, the greater the distance traveled. For you calculus junkies, integrate velocity to get displacement.
distance divided by velocity will give time
Distance(velocity), or D(v)