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Acceleration is an object's change in velocity divided by its change in time. So: acceleration=(final velocity - initial velocity)/(final time - initial time)
Acceleration= Distance/time (distance divided by time) That's the dumbest answer I've ever heard.. Acceleration = Final Velocity - Initial Velocity/Time Velocity = Displacement/Time So you can't calculate acceleration from distance and time, you can only do velocity.
No. Acceleration is (change of velocity) divided by (time interval in which it changed). If velocity doesn't change, then there is no acceleration.
Acceleration is change of velocity divided by time; so if the velocity doesn't change, acceleration is zero.
A=Vf-Vi/t Acceleration is the final velocity minus the initial velocity divided by the time it too to reach it
Acceleration = (change in velocity) divided by (time for the change)
Change in velocity divided by time is acceleration, but velocity divided by time has no particular significance.
Time equals velocity divided by acceleration. t=v/a
time
Velocity
Time.
It is acceleration. The difference between final velocity and initial velocity, divided by the time is the AVERAGE acceleration. Remember, though that velocity is a vector. So if you are going round in a circle at a constant speed, your direction of motion is changing continuously and so you are always accelerating!