The International System of Units (SI) has two type of units, base units and derived units. Speed is a derived unit. Its unit is Meter/sec. Its a scalar quantity.
SI unit stands for system international unit for speed
It stands for speed obviously. If you are asking what it is then the derived unit is m/s. Which stands for metres per second.
meters per second
meters per second
The Kinetic energy (KE) of the go-cart can be calculated through knowing is mass and velocity. KE = 1/2 times both mass and velocity squared. The units are KE in joules, mass in kilograms, and velocity in meters per second. If you round to one significant figure this go-carts KE is 50-joules.
225000 J
Three objects that can cause an object to accelerate is, increasing speed, decreasing speed, & changing direction.-Ms. Stroes/Chibudu's Science Class! :)
The magnitude is 50.
the velocity term of m/s is meters per second hopefully this is what you were asking
"ms" may be short for meters per second.It is possible that somebody was talking about velocity; in this case, "north" is the direction of the movement.
the velocity term of m/s is meters per second hopefully this is what you were asking
meter/second or ms-1
You have: F = ( m ) ( a ) = ( 1.0 kg ) (1.0 m/s^2 ) = 1.0 Newton = 1.0 N <----------------------
10kg
No, the standard unit (SI unit) for any velocity is ms-1
meters per second
No; the metre is a unit of length. The appropriate unit for speed would be metres per second, ms-1.
ms-2 SI Unit of acceleration feet-2 etcD. Meters per second squared
It's ms-1. Since SI unit of velocity is ms-1, thus the rate of change of it should be m/second
'ms-2' is the SI derived unit of acceleration. It means that a speed X is changing by 1ms-1 for every second of its acceleration.