It could move with a constant speed and not at constant velocity. Because the direction is ever changing. Speed is a scalar but velocity is a vector quantity which has direction aspect too.
Velocity is Speed in a given direction. Moving at constant velocity is equivalent to say moving with a constant speed in a specified direction. So, moving at constant velocity implicitly means moving with constant speed.
a "body" "moving body" an "object" is moving with constant velocity. [OR] a "body" is moving with constant velocity.
When the velocity of a moving object stays the same, it has a constant speed.
an acceleration of Zero, and a constant Inertia.
While the speed may be constant, the velocity changes because velocity is a vector quantity that includes direction. As the car drives around the circular track, its direction constantly changes, causing the velocity to change even though the speed remains the same. This change in velocity is due to the centripetal acceleration required to keep the car moving in a circular path.
The word is "stationary" for not moving, and "constant velocity" for moving at a constant speed in the same direction.
A motion with a constant speed will always be moving the same speed A motion with a constant acceleration will constantly be gaining speed, and does not remain moving at the same speed.
When all forces are balanced, the object can either be moving at a constant velocity or be at rest. But because you asked for balanced forces on a moving object, it is moving at a constant velocity.
An object moving in a straight line at a speed of 50 km/h with a constant velocity of 50 km/h in the same direction is an example of constant speed and constant velocity.
constant slope. really anything will work as long as it stays the same. so if your line is straight then you have a constant velocity. :)
Not necessarily. Constant velocity also means no change in direction.
Yes. An object moving in a straight line at constant speed has constant velocity.