No. Velocity is a 'vector', which means it's a measurement that has both magnitude and direction. The magnitude is what we usually call the 'speed'. For an object moving in a circle, it could have constant speed ... the velocity could have constant magnitude ... but there's no way the whole velocity vector could be constant, because the direction is always changing. Constant velocity is very easy to recognize ... the object is moving at a steady speed, in a straight line.
Velocity basically just means speed. We drove at a high velocity down the highway.
the bus drove east on the freeway for 5 minutes
No...it is a noun. I think you mean NOISILY, as in "The car drove noisily past."....which IS an adverb.
How about you do your own homework, and in particular that which requires drawing which we can't do here, instead?I don't even think I could describe what to draw in terms any simpler than the question itself.
It can be either, because there is no adverb form (fastly) for speed.A fast car (adjective)He drove fast (adverb)
their average speed is greater than their average velocity.
Velocity basically just means speed. We drove at a high velocity down the highway.
Their average speed is the harmonic mean of 30 and 45 while their average velocity is zero.
The answer is 224/4 = 56 miles per hour
zero
the bus drove east on the freeway for 5 minutes
He drove 20 miles in 50 min. so average was 20 x 60/50 = 24 mph
Obama.
It drove people around
40 mph
Velocity = Distance ÷ Time Average Velocity = (10 + 10) ÷ (1/3 + 1/2) = 20 ÷ 5/6 = 20 x 6/5 = 24 mph NOTE : The times in minutes have been converted into fractions of an hour to enable the answer to be provided in miles per hour.
0 m/s appex