its uniform.
Uniform.
During constant acceleration, either the object's speed changes at a constant rate, or the direction of its motion changes at a constant rate, or both.
The velocity increases at a constant rate.
The rate at which an object covers distance is called the object's "speed".If the direction of its motion is also stated, then you have the object's"velocity".
Velocity
It moves with a constant acceleration downwards. This means that its velocity is increasing at a constant rate.
The velocity of an object in uniform circular motion is constant, because, velocity is the rate of change of position at a given time or speed.
Motion implies momentum, which implies velocity. Linear implies a straight line. Accelerating implies changing velocity. And uniform implies constancy. So, when an object moves in a straight line and accelerates at a constant rate, you have uniformly accelerating linear motion.
That is the object's 'speed'.
That is the object's 'speed'.
No. An object in free-fall accelerates at a constant rate of acceleration.Its speed grows at a constant rate.
That's the object's 'speed'.