speed=distance/time. velocity=distance/time+direction.
The letter "M" is commonly used to represent speed in physics, specifically in equations related to velocity (v).
Yes because it is going to be helpful to find the derivative of certain equations such as velocity speed and accelaration
That would be vector. It describes the direction and velocity of an object. Rectangular and polar equations.
Velocity = distance / unit of time
1. Gravity is acceleration. 2. speed is a scalar quantity. 3 . velocity is a vector quantity. In other words, gravity is the force which accelerates matter towards the centre of a mass. Speed is how fast something is moving in general. Velocity is speed in one direction. I suppose a link could be using the suvat equations with velocity and acceleration. But vector and scalar quantities don't mix very well.
The kinematic equations can be derived by integrating the acceleration function to find the velocity function, and then integrating the velocity function to find the position function. These equations describe the motion of an object in terms of its position, velocity, and acceleration over time.
Speed in a given direction is velocity.
SPEED has the speed only; while VELOCITY has the direction and the speed.
Part of every velocity is a speed. Speed is the size of the velocity.But the velocity also has a direction, which the speed doesn't.'30 mph North' and '30 mph West' are the same speed but different velocity.
Speed in a given direction is called velocity.
The relationship between acceleration, initial velocity, final velocity, displacement, and time in a given motion is described by the suvat equations. These equations show how these variables are related and can be used to calculate one variable if the others are known. The equations are used in physics to analyze and predict the motion of objects.
Fundamentally, you measure distance and time. If instead you have some assorted facts such as initial velocity, final velocity, time, acceleration and so on then you would use the SUVAT equations, which you can look up in wikipedia.