The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
If it "does not travel", the speed is zero. Not much to calculate there.
The average speed is the ratio between the distance and time.
Cyclists average speed = (total distance of the race)/(time it took him, from starting gun to finish line)
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
It has an average speed of 7.2 metres per second.
1.82 m/s
the speed
I'm sure that average speed would be easier to calculate than instantaneous speed. To calculate average speed, just take the time that it takes to travel between two points, and divide that into the distance between the points.
If it "does not travel", the speed is zero. Not much to calculate there.
The average speed is the ratio between the distance and time.
Since the speed is constant (acceleration is zero), we know the horizontal forces are balanced.The swimmer's forward force cancels the 110N drag force.Work done by the swimmer is (110N x .22meter) = 24.2 N-m per second= 24.2 Joules per second= 24.2 watts
That is just not true! If you can calculate its average speed you should be able to calculate its speed at any point in time during its flight, including its final velocity.
you calculate average speed by dividing the total distance to the total time.
Average speed = (distance covered) divided by (time to cover the distance)
the average speed is the total distance traveled divided by the total time.
Yes. If an object is moving at a constant speed the average speed and the constant speed are the same.
Average acceleration = Change in speed/time so Time = Change in speed/Average acceleration