Exactly equal to what it was at the first instant of motion.
200/ms
No. Velocity has two parts, speed and direction A constant velocity means that both the speed and the direction must be constant. So a constant velocity must have a constant speed.
non-constant speed is when the speed for an object does not stay the same
Newtons first law
Constant speed is constant velocity which means your going a certain speed in a straight line. Speed is just your speed at an exact moment also called instantaneous speed
Constant speed means that speed doesn't change. Constant acceleration means that acceleration doesn't change. (If the acceleration is anything but zero, speed WILL change.)
The average speed over the first 30 miles is equal to the average speed over the next 15 miles. You cannot guarantee that the speed was constant inbetween, though. The average speeds are 45 MPH for each leg.
125 meters per minute.
Constant speed (in a straight line) means there is no acceleration.Constant speed (in a straight line) means there is no acceleration.Constant speed (in a straight line) means there is no acceleration.Constant speed (in a straight line) means there is no acceleration.
1.5 km is a distance, not a speed.
60km/h
I am going to assume you meant a constant speed of 1.5km/min. speed = distance/time distance = speed x time = 1.5km/min x 5.0min = 7.5km
You can travel 2.375 miles.
at that constant speed about 3 minutes and 30 seconds
I would like to state first that you misspelled horizontal. The answer to your question is Constant speed.
The total driving time at a constant speed, excluding stops or delays, is 45 miles.
constant velocity is when you maintain speed and direction, this usually is in a straight line, and constant speed means that your speed is always constant at all times.
Yes. If an object is moving at a constant speed the average speed and the constant speed are the same.