Average speed is distance traveled divided by time taken.
Average speed is distance traveled divided by time taken.
No such thing as an average speed- varies greatly by caliber. I have some firearms that shoot at 830 FPS, and some that shoot at 4000 FPS.
Generally, the average car speed is whatever the speed limit is. While some go over and under, others stay right on the speed limit, making it the average.
Average speed = (distance traveled during some time) divided by (length of time to travel that distance)
An object's average speed is(the distance it traveled during some time)/(the time it took to cover the distance).
Depends on the companie you have your internet from...there is no average speed as some companies have high speed like fiber optic and some still have slow internet like dial up and satelite
something,some how and some where.
In order to find an average velocity, you need an average speed and an average direction. Average speed = (distance traveled) divided by (time to travel that distance) Average direction could be defined as the direction from the starting point to the end point.
Average speed = d/t (distance covered in some period of time) divided by (the length of time to cover it)
The total distance by the total time of a moving object is the average speed of the object. If the moving object is a train that makes a few stops along its route, it will have some kind of average speed associated with its journey. An investigator will find the average speed by dividing the total distance it traveled by the total time that has elapses since it left point A to get to point B.
If I drive away from my house at 8:00 in the morning and return at 6:00 PM that same evening with 50 more miles showing on the car, you know immediately that my average speed for the day was 5 mph. But you don't know a thing about how much of that time I was stopped, how much in motion, or what my speed was at any moment between 8 and 6, because there's no necessary relationship between instantaneous and average speed. I guess it's probably true to say that there has to be some instant during any period of time when the instantaneous speed must be equal to the average speed during the same period. That sounds like a nice theorem, and its proof ought to be good for some mathematical recreation, but it doesn't seem too useful.
No. if you are accelerating from rest, for example, and reach 80 mph starting from 0, your average velocity is 40 mph, but your speed is 80 mph at the end. Generally we speak of average speed, so if it takes one hour to go 60 miles your average speed is 60 mph, even though you may have slowed and then gone faster at certain times.