Magnitude of acceleration (but conveys no information
regarding acceleration's direction).
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
No, displacement is the area under the velocity vs. time graph. The slope of a velocity vs. time graph represents acceleration.
To find the velocity of a position-time graph, you calculate the slope of the graph at a specific point. The slope represents the rate of change of position with respect to time, which is the velocity. The steeper the slope, the greater the velocity.
No, acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It is the derivative of the velocity function, not the slope of the velocity vs. time graph. The slope of the velocity vs. time graph represents the rate of change of velocity, not acceleration.
Acceleration can be found by computing the slope of a velocity vs. time graph. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity over time, so the slope of a velocity vs. time graph represents this change in velocity.
The tangent at a point on the position-time graph represents the instantaneous velocity. 1. The tangent is the instantaneous slope. 2. Rather than "average" velocity, the slope gives you "instantaneous" velocity. The average of the instantaneous gives you average velocity.
No, acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It represents how quickly an object's velocity is changing over time, whereas the slope of the velocity vs. time graph represents the change in velocity over time.
Velocity=m m=rise/run
No, the slope of a speed-versus-time graph represents the rate of change of speed, not acceleration. Acceleration is represented by the slope of a velocity-versus-time graph.
The slope of that graph at each point is the speed at that instant of time.
No. Slope of position/time graph is speed, or magnitude of velocity.Slope of speed/time graph is magnitude of acceleration.