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No, the distance an object travels in unit time is called speed. The distance travelled per unit time in a specified direction is called velocity. The rate of change of velocity is called acceleration.
The horizontal distance will be doubled.
this can never change, light travels at a constant speed, a light year is the distance light travels in one year.
In that case, each second the distance travelled will be less than the second before that.
If you keep th velocity of projection and change the angle of projection from 75 degrees to 45 degrees what will happen to the horizontal distance the projectile travels? if you finish the nova net lesson you might learn the answer! It will travel a greater distance!
The formula for the distance traveled (assuming a constant speed) is:distance = time x speed So, any of the two factors on the right side of the equation will affect the distance.
An object's speed changes whenever the rate of change between the distance the object travels and the time it takes to travel that distance changes. Do not confuse speed with velocity; speed is scalar, and velocity is vector. Velocity can change when speed remains constant.
An object's speed changes whenever the rate of change between the distance the object travels and the time it takes to travel that distance changes. Do not confuse speed with velocity; speed is scalar, and velocity is vector. Velocity can change when speed remains constant.
Alt Sometimes, pilots refer to AGL which stands for "Above Ground Level". This is the distance from the ground to the airplane. If the plane flys at a level pressure altitude, this distance can change with the terrain.
the airplane helps you travel faster
This is an approximate direct (straight line) distance. During actual travel, this distance may change if a different flight route is chosen. The distance between the two places in miles is:1514
That depends on how fast the spaceship is traveling, and the change in distance between the two planets (in their respective orbits) as it travels.