Velocity can only be identified by acceleration or time, even though we can also find it using force
To find acceleration you subtract initial velocity from final velocity and divide it by time.
Acceleration is change in velocity per unit time(derivative of velocity with respect to time). If you have a graph or chart of velocity values vs time, then you can calculate (change in velocity) / (change in time). This is the slope of the graph at a specific point in time.Mass, along with acceleration determines force.
Acceleration = Change in velocity divided by the change in time. This formula only works if velocity is constant. If velocity is not constant, find the acceleration for both points in time. Then add the two accelerations and divide by 2.
No. Acceleration is change of velocity / time. If there is no change in velocity, there is no acceleration.
average acceleration is the average of the acceleration of a body in its entire motion where as instantaneous acceleration is the rate of change of velocity at an instant. it may be a function of time or velocity or displacement.
Acceleration = (change in velocity) divided by (time for the change)
To find acceleration you subtract initial velocity from final velocity and divide it by time.
Time equals velocity divided by acceleration. t=v/a
Find out the time using speed and acceleration, (time=speed/acceleration) and then use it to find out uniform velocity. From that find out uniform acceleration. (as uniform acceleration is equal changes of velocity over equal intervals of time)
Use the formula Acceleration = (final velosity - initial velocity)/ time.
(acceleration X time) + beginning velocity = final speed
You cannot. Acceleration is the rate of change in velocity over time
You do not need force. Velocity is the integral of acceleration with respect to time. The orthogonal components of acceleration can be integrated independently to give the orthogonal components of velocity.
Since acceleration is defined as change of velocity divide by time, it has units of (velocity / time). acceleration x time = (velocity / time) x time = velocity
The final velocity is (the initial velocity) plus (the acceleration multiplied by the time).
acceleration a----->velocity=acceleration x time: v=a x t
the formula for finding acceleration is final velocity, minus initial velocity, all over time. So if you have the acceleration and initial speed, which is equal to the initial velocity, you must also have time in order to find the final velocity. Once you have the time, you multiply it by the acceleration. That product gives you the difference of the final velocity and initial velocity, so then you just add the initial velocity to the product to find the final velocity.