Yes, there are velocity graphs, (velocity being on the y axis and time being on the x axis). However, these graphs are not to be mixed up with position verses time graphs. On a velocity verses time graph, (the units for velocity being m/s), an object at rest is plotted as a straight line along the horizontal axis. This shows that time is progressing, but there is no motion of the objest. Uniform motion is also plotted as a straight line, but must be placed someplace above the horizontal axis. Acceleration and decceleration on a velocity vs time graph are represented by diagonal lines unlike the curved lines on a position verses time graph
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Yes, if you have a non-constant acceleration.
B. The direction of the object's velocity is constant.
use a uniform acceleration equation, Δx = ½ (Vi + Vf) Δt where displacement = 1/2 (initial velocity + final velocity) time displacement = 1/2 (59 m/s + 78 m/s) * 12s displacement = 822 m
The three kinds of graph is bar graph, line graph, and pie graph. bar graph is used to compare two or more things. A line graph is used to show changes over time. A pie graph is used to show proportions.
Yes, graphs and charts can be a part of a scientific explanation.
Experimental growth function are graphs. The graphs shows the growth of each function.
A distance-time graph for an object moving at a constant velocity will be a straight line - the gradient of the line corresponds to the velocity. Non-uniform motion will cause the gradient of the line to change.
I assume you mean "non-uniform". "Uniform" simply means that the velocity (in this case) doesn't change.
It isn't. Constant velocity? Uniform velocity across a group of objects?
The acceleratipn of a body with uniform velocity is zero. Acceleratipn is the time rate of change of velocity. If the velocity is uniform, then its time rate of change is zero.
The answer depends on what information is graphed. There are distance-time graphs, velocity-time graphs, speed-time graphs, acceleration-time graphs.
The dependent value on a velocity-time graph is velocity.
No, uniform angular velocity means no angular acceleration.
If the velocity is uniform, then the final velocity and the initial velocity are the same. Perhaps you meant to say uniform acceleration. In any event, the question needs to be stated more precisely.
"Uniform velocity" means zero acceleration, that is, constant speed in a straight line.rate of change of velocity is zero
Uniform velocity is velocity unaffected by acceleration. Variable velocity is velocity affected by acceleration. Lauren "Physics above all!"
A body moving at a uniform speed may have a uniform velocity, or its velocity could be changing. How could that be? Let's look. The difference between speed and velocity is that velocity is speed.
Uniform velocity means the velocity is not changing. Acceleration is defined as the rate of change of velocity. If velocity isn't changing, the rate of change is zero.