Increase, because the most free fall the most velocity for second.
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Att: Alvaro y Luza (Pereira-Colombia)!
Its to do with constant values, the rate of acceleration refers to a constant change of velocity over time, so an acceleration of 10 (m/s)/s is a constant increase of velocity per unit time ( increase of 10 metres per second, every second )Velocity is a constant increase in distance, per unit time (metres per second)
-- The speed can increase. -- The speed can decrease. -- The path can bend from a straight line. Each of these is an example of 'acceleration'.
When light passes through a second medium with different refractive index as the first medium, its velocity will decrease or increase depending on its wavelength and the difference in refractive index of the two media. This causes the 'bending' of light as each of its components try to travel through the second medium at different velocities.
The maximum height of a thrown ball is dependent on the upward portion of the initial velocity. Air friction will slow it somewhat but gravity will cause it to lose most of its upward velocity. The velocity will decrease by 9.8 m/sec for each second of its upward motion, until it reaches zero. At that point, the ball is pulled back toward Earth.
It is acceleration that is measured in distance per unit of time per unit time, or in meters per second per second, as the question asked. The only thing missing is the direction vector.
Decrease
If you fall from a very considerable height then initially the distance that you fall will increase with each second that you fall. However, air resistance increases markedly with speed and this causes your acceleration to decrease so that you reach a maximum speed (terminal velocity)
A body cannot be accelerated at 1.8 metres per second since that is a measure of velocity, not acceleration. The rest of the question is, therefore, unanswerable.
Its to do with constant values, the rate of acceleration refers to a constant change of velocity over time, so an acceleration of 10 (m/s)/s is a constant increase of velocity per unit time ( increase of 10 metres per second, every second )Velocity is a constant increase in distance, per unit time (metres per second)
decrease
They will increase.
-- The speed can increase. -- The speed can decrease. -- The path can bend from a straight line. Each of these is an example of 'acceleration'.
Increase decrease. The frequency MUST decrease.
When light passes through a second medium with different refractive index as the first medium, its velocity will decrease or increase depending on its wavelength and the difference in refractive index of the two media. This causes the 'bending' of light as each of its components try to travel through the second medium at different velocities.
Shelby
The maximum height of a thrown ball is dependent on the upward portion of the initial velocity. Air friction will slow it somewhat but gravity will cause it to lose most of its upward velocity. The velocity will decrease by 9.8 m/sec for each second of its upward motion, until it reaches zero. At that point, the ball is pulled back toward Earth.
No. Raising the temperature of the particles will cause their velocity to increase, which in turn causes them to collide with each other/the container more often and with more force.