Acceleration is a change in speed or velocity. So if you going faster than your starting speed your accelerating. If your changing direction (a change in velocity) then that is also acceleration.
The answer depends on what the graph is meant to show. The first step would be to read the axis labels.
Acceleration is characterized by a change to the velocity of a mass (ie to the speed of any object) The change can be an increase or a decrease in speed or a change in direction. The change results from the application of a force on the object. The mathematical formula is F=M*A where F is force, M is mass and A is acceleration. Note that force and acceleration are vector quantities, that is, direction should be part of the full description.
Average Acceleration can be verbally defined as the change in velocity in a certain change in time... More simply put: Average Acceleration = (Final Velocity - Initial Velocity) / (Final Time - Initial Time)
You can't. However, you can find the change in speed between two points in time by finding the area under the acceleration-time graph.
It is important to recognize when poor performance is due to a bad car part. Symptoms of a bad camshaft sensor are misfiring, hesitation during acceleration, and not starting.
Yes. A ngular acceleration is to do with something turning. Radial acceleration is linear acceleration perpendicular to the angular acceleration.
Gravitational acceleration is simply acceleration due to gravity.
Acceleration
There is no force of acceleration. Acceleration is the rate at which velocity changes over time. A net force causes acceleration.
Force=mass*acceleration 80N=10kg*acceleration 80N/10kg=acceleration 8m/s2=acceleration The acceleration is 8m/s2.
acceleration a----->velocity=acceleration x time: v=a x t
Force = mass x acceleration, therefore, acceleration = force / mass.Force = mass x acceleration, therefore, acceleration = force / mass.Force = mass x acceleration, therefore, acceleration = force / mass.Force = mass x acceleration, therefore, acceleration = force / mass.