Change in direction would cause a change in acceleration. Knowing that the derivative of the velocity with respect to time (v'(t)) is equal to the acceleration with respect to time (a(t)), if you were to change the direction, it would also change the sign of the velocity, because it is a vector quantity (dependent on direction).
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity of an object over time. It can be an increase or decrease in speed, or a change in direction. It is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude and direction.
it changes the speed
Acceleration is any change in velocity.
newton's
the rate at which velocity changes velocity=speed in a given direction
A basic physics answer for this is that a net force (or unbalanced force) will cause an object to accelerate, that is, cause the object to change its speed and/or direction.
Yes
The four types of acceleration are linear acceleration (change in speed along a straight line), angular acceleration (change in rotational speed), radial acceleration (change in direction of velocity), and centripetal acceleration (acceleration toward the center of a circular path).
Change the Direction, Change the Speed and Change the Shape :)
gravitey
Yes, an unbalanced force will cause an object to accelerate or change its velocity, resulting in a change in motion. The direction of the acceleration will be in the same direction as the unbalanced force.
Acceleration is the rate of change of an object's velocity with respect to time. It describes how quickly an object's speed is changing, either slowing down (deceleration) or speeding up. It is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude (how much the speed is changing) and direction.