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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.
Speed and Velocity are two different things . Velocity- "the rate at which an object changes its position." Speed- "How fast an object is moving". To calculate speed and velocity, you first need to calculate distance and time. Velocity is considered to be a more logical term
Distance = time x speed
Mass of a body and its speed are needed to calculate kinetic energy. Kinetic energy of an object = mv2/2 This formula is useful only when object's speed is much less than speed of light.
the speed
If it "does not travel", the speed is zero. Not much to calculate there.
Initial speed is the original, beginning speed of an object.
Yes. If an object is moving at a constant speed the average speed and the constant speed are the same.
The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
Speed and Velocity are two different things . Velocity- "the rate at which an object changes its position." Speed- "How fast an object is moving". To calculate speed and velocity, you first need to calculate distance and time. Velocity is considered to be a more logical term
stopwatch and tape measure
Distance over time.
Distance = time x speed
well in order to calculate the speed of the object at the start point you need to know: # mass/weight of the object # the air resistance # the angle # the form of the object
kinetic energy
If you only have the speed/time graph, you can't calculate force out of it. You could if you also knew the mass of the object that's speeding along, but not with the speed alone.