With a nail gun
A straight line on a distance/time graph means that the speed is constant. In every unit of time the distance increases by the same amount.
distance = speed x time.This assumes a constant speed.distance = speed x time.This assumes a constant speed.distance = speed x time.This assumes a constant speed.distance = speed x time.This assumes a constant speed.
The equation for constant speed is distance = speed x time, where distance is the total distance traveled, speed is the constant speed at which the object is moving, and time is the duration of travel.
If you have a constant speed, you are not accelerating.
No. The total distance traveled divided by constant speed is the time interval.
On a time graph, constant speed is represented by a straight line with a constant slope. The slope of the line indicates the speed of the object – the steeper the slope, the faster the speed, and the shallower the slope, the slower the speed.
You didn't specify what data is given. In general, for constant speed, the following formula is important (just use the definition of speed): speed = distance / time; or distance = speed x time. If distance is in km and time in hours, speed will be in km/hour; if distance is in meters and time in seconds, speed will be in meters/second.
Yes. An object moving in a straight line at constant speed has constant velocity.
Nail gun.
A constant speed has no acceleration. When an object is moving at a constant speed, its velocity remains the same over time, and there is no change in acceleration.
Time is inversely proportional to speed.
The ratio of distance to time remains constant for a body moving at a uniform speed because the speed is consistent over time, meaning the body covers equal distances in equal intervals of time. This leads to a constant ratio, which is the definition of constant speed (distance traveled per unit of time).