Distance divided by the time it takes to cover the distance, equals average speed per unit of time.
For example: An object takes 0.5 seconds to cover 1 foot.
1 divided by 0.5 equals 2 (1/0.5=2) so it is traveling at an average speed of 2 feet per second.
v= s/t v= speed s=path t=time to calculate the average speed you need the path the object is moving on and the time it took to pass it
If it "does not travel", the speed is zero. Not much to calculate there.
The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
as the moving object covers some distance in some interval of time and average speed is obtained by dividing the total distance travelled by total time taken
Because you is gay
Yes. If an object is moving at a constant speed the average speed and the constant speed are the same.
the speed
No, it can't. Average VELOCITY can be zero, though.
v= s/t v= speed s=path t=time to calculate the average speed you need the path the object is moving on and the time it took to pass it
When an object is moving along a straight line at a variable speed, we can express the magnitude of the rate of motion in terms of average velocity.It is the same way as we calculate average speed.
If it "does not travel", the speed is zero. Not much to calculate there.
The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
average speed
The average speed of an moving object is determined by using the formula velocity=distance/time or v=d/t.
Average speed and instantaneous speed are both measurements of the speed of an object. The instantaneous speed measures how fast the object is going at a particular moment, while average speed shows how fast the object was moving in total over time.
Because you is gay
as the moving object covers some distance in some interval of time and average speed is obtained by dividing the total distance travelled by total time taken