yes
Yes, if the acceleration is not colinear with the existing velocity.
If you are traveling at a constant speed with changing direction there is a change in velocity, so you are accelerating.
No. An object traveling at a constant velocity is not accelerating.
No. Acceleration is change of velocity / time. If there is no change in velocity, there is no acceleration.
If a velocity or speed is constant there isn't an acceleration. This is because the acceleration is the change in speed or velocity and if it's constant then there sn't a change.
Yes, if the acceleration is not colinear with the existing velocity.
If you are traveling at a constant speed with changing direction there is a change in velocity, so you are accelerating.
No. An object traveling at a constant velocity is not accelerating.
No. Acceleration is change of velocity / time. If there is no change in velocity, there is no acceleration.
If a velocity or speed is constant there isn't an acceleration. This is because the acceleration is the change in speed or velocity and if it's constant then there sn't a change.
yes, if the acceleration is in the opposite direction of the velocity.
When something is traveling at a constant velocity it has no acceleration. In other words your answer is 0.
Velocity is a constant traveling speed. Acceleration is increasing traveling speed (variation of speed over time)
If, as you say, its acceleration is "constant", then the average is exactly equal to that constant.
If an object is traveling at a constant velocity, its acceleration is 0. Even if it traveled for 2 years.
An object in uniform circular motion undergoes constant acceleration but moves at constant "speed".Constant "velocity" means no acceleration.
Velocity is speed together with its direction.Acceleration indicates a change in velocity ... speed or direction or both.Change of direction means acceleration, even if speed is constant.Constant velocity means constant speed and direction ... zero acceleration.