We can see buildings, other trains, countryside, mountains and much more from a moving train depending on where you are.
The passengers reference point ! The passengers are moving at the same speed as the train.
Relative motion. To talk about a train moving at a certain speed usually means that the train is moving at a certain speed relative to a stationary observer (relative to the ground). This however also means that a passenger traveling in said train would experience the ground (and every other stationary object) as the moving object. This is why a stationary train may seem to be moving to passengers of an already moving train.
If you see a clock on a very fast train moving by you, you would observe that the clock appears to be moving faster than normal due to the train's speed. This is because of the relative motion between you and the train.
Definitely to the left inside the train; but actually they are in the train and when the train goes right they oughta go the same way
Once aboard the train, you act as a detective, finding clues and talking to the passengers until you can discover who is behind the theft of scientific devices on the train. One of the passengers or crew is the guilty party. (see the related solution question)
A train cart can hold approximately 52 passengers.
If the train is moving at 50 mph and the passenger is walking at 2 mph, people on the train would see her moving at 2 mph, while people outside the train would see her moving at 48 mph. 50mph - 2 mph = 48 mph
Train Passengers.
"freight"
To find the total seating capacity of the commuter train, multiply the number of seats per car by the number of cars. Since each car can seat 114 passengers and there are 7 cars, the total seating capacity is 114 passengers × 7 cars = 798 passengers. Thus, the train can seat 798 passengers in total.
Yes if the train is moving forward, you are moving at the train speed + walking speed relative to the tracks.
Passengers ride trains.