yes
No, an object cannot be accelerated if it is moving with constant speed. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so if the speed is constant, there is no change in velocity, and therefore no acceleration.
An object is said to have accelerated motion when its velocity is changing over time. This change in velocity could be due to an increase or decrease in speed, or a change in direction. It is not just moving at a constant speed.
a "body" "moving body" an "object" is moving with constant velocity. [OR] a "body" is moving with constant velocity.
Yes, it can. Perhaps the simplest example is when an object moves at constant speed, in a circle. In this case, the speed doesn't change; the velocity does.
If the distance is not changing, the object is not moving. If the distance is increasing or decreasing linearly then the object is moving at a constant velocity. If the distance is increasing or decreasing parabolically then the object is being accelerated or decellerated.
When the velocity of a moving object stays the same, it has a constant speed.
Yes, an object can be accelerated even if it is moving at a constant speed if the direction of its velocity changes. This change in velocity, even if the magnitude of speed remains constant, indicates acceleration. For example, if a car is moving around a circular track at a constant speed, its direction is changing constantly, resulting in acceleration.
Yes, it can. Perhaps the simplest example is when an object moves at constant speed, in a circle. In this case, the speed doesn't change; the velocity does.
an acceleration of Zero, and a constant Inertia.
No. Acceleration is any change of velocity.But its speed can be constant.
The condition for an object to stay at rest or if moving, moving at a constant velocity is that the sum of forces acting on the object be zero or that no force acts on the object.
Yes. An object moving in a straight line at constant speed has constant velocity.