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accelaration is defined as the rate of change of velocity. Therefore the formula for acceleration is a =(Final Velocity - Initial Velocity) divide by the (change in time)
Accelaration= change in velocity/time taken OR Acceleration=final velocity- initial velocity/time taken
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity per time, so to get velocity, multiply (acceleration)*(time). This will give the change in velocity over the specific amount of time. You must add the initial velocity to get the final velocity, so we have the formula: Vf = Vo + a*t, where Vo is the initial velocity. This means that you can rearrange to get Vo = Vf - a*t
Is a change in velocity (increase/decrease). It also equals; final velocity-initial velocity divided by time
change in time, initial velocity and final velocity
Without distance, you have to know time, initial velocity, and acceleration, in order to find final velocity.
Final velocity = (Initial velocity) + (time)(acceleration)
Well, (final velocity) = (initial velocity) + (acceleration x time)
Final velocity = Initial velocity +(acceleration * time)
The final velocity is (the initial velocity) plus (the acceleration multiplied by the time).
You subtract the initial velocity from the final velocity and divide by the time interval.
Acceleration is an object's change in velocity divided by its change in time. So: acceleration=(final velocity - initial velocity)/(final time - initial time)
Final Velocity- Initial Velocity Time
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.
Vf = Vi + at Where Vf = final velocity Vi = initial velocity a = acceleration t = time
(acceleration X time) + beginning velocity = final speed
No, It is the average velocity.