No. You can say the velocity is constant if the car has a constant direction speed and constant direction. The car may be going in a circle in which case the direction is changing and the velocity is changing even if the speed is constant.
If the car is going straight and changing speed the velocity is also changing. Speed is a part of velocity but it is not the velocity. Velocity involves speed AND direction.
Just as distance and displacement have distinctly different meanings (despite their similarities), so do speed and velocity. Speed is a scalar quantity which refers to "how fast an object is moving." Speed can be thought of as the rate at which an object covers distance. A fast-moving object has a high speed and covers a relatively large distance in a short amount of time. A slow-moving object has a low speed and covers a relatively small amount of distance in a short amount of time. An object with no movement at all has a zero speed.
Velocity is a vector quantity which refers to "the rate at which an object changes its position." Imagine a person moving rapidly - one step forward and one step back - always returning to the original starting position. While this might result in a frenzy of activity, it would result in a zero velocity. Because the person always returns to the original position, the motion would never result in a change in position. Since velocity is defined as the rate at which the position changes, this motion results in zero velocity. If a person in motion wishes to maximize their velocity, then that person must make every effort to maximize the amount that they are displaced from their original position. Every step must go into moving that person further from where he or she started. For certain, the person should never change directions and begin to return to the starting position.
Velocity is a vector quantity. As such, velocity is direction aware. When evaluating the velocity of an object, one must keep track of direction. It would not be enough to say that an object has a velocity of 55 mi/hr. One must include direction information in order to fully describe the velocity of the object. For instance, you must describe an object's velocity as being 55 mi/hr, east. This is one of the essential differences between speed and velocity. Speed is a scalar quantity and does not keep track of direction; velocity is a vector quantity and is direction aware.As an object moves, it often undergoes changes in speed. For example, during an average trip to school, there are many changes in speed. Rather than the speed-o-meter maintaining a steady reading, the needle constantly moves up and down to reflect the stopping and starting and the accelerating and decelerating. One instant, the car may be moving at 50 mi/hr and another instant, it might be stopped (i.e., 0 mi/hr). Yet during the trip to school the person might average 32 mi/hr. The average speed during an entire motion can be thought of as the average of all speedometer readings. If the speedometer readings could be collected at 1-second intervals (or 0.1-second intervals or ... ) and then averaged together, the average speed could be determined. example. A football coach paces back and forth along the sidelines. The diagram below shows several of coach's positions at various times. At each marked position, the coach makes a "U-turn" and moves in the opposite direction. In other words, the coach moves from position A to B to C to D.
What is the coach's average speed and average velocity? When finished, click the button to view the answer.
In conclusion, speed and velocity are kinematic quantities which have distinctly different definitions. Speed, being a scalar quantity, is the rate at which an object covers distance. The average speed is the distance (a scalar quantity) per time ratio. Speed is ignorant of direction. On the other hand, velocity is a vector quantity; it is direction-aware. Velocity is the rate at which the position changes. The average velocity is the displacement or position change (a vector quantity) per time ratio.
If during that entire period of time the speedometer read 60, then the speed was constant in your relative inertial reference frame
No itÕs not. Acceleration only occurs when there is a change in velocity with time but since the velocity is constant there is no acceleration.
yes
a constant
Midfielders
The temperature remain constant during the phase changing.
named constant
as we know during experiments, we cant go with or have the actual accuracy requried same here heads are not properly maintaied constant during exeperment.
constant is a fixed value that do not changed during execution constant is a fixed value that do not changed during execution
An aggregate constant is a nonscalar constant which value never change or are not changed during execution of the program.
what makes my 2002 inside lights will work during the day but not night, my dashlight, speedometer ,radio lights
The constant/experimental constant.
During the POST a single beep indicate normal operation of the PC. hope this will help cathrine mauchi
a constant
Midfielders
Constant
During constant acceleration, either the object's speed changes at a constant rate, or the direction of its motion changes at a constant rate, or both.
The size of the continent remains constant. What increases is the ice sheet when it joins the sea ice that freezes during winter, essentially doubling in size. During the summer, the ice sheet covers 98% of the continent.
Warring
A certain amount of flailing is normal because babies don't really know what they are doing, however, beyond a certain point this can indicate a medical problem. I could not really offer a diagnosis based on that amount of information. Consult your pediatrician.