velocity
They would be traveling at the same speed. Two objects moving with the same velocity must be moving in the same direction and at the same speed. The reason for this is because velocity is speed in a specified direction. Another way to say that is to say that velocity is speed with a direction vector. It is a physical quantity with magnitude and direction. Two objects moving with the same speed could be moving toward a head-on collision. Or they could be moving along convergent, divergent or skewed paths. Not so with two objects that have identical velocities. They are moving on the same or on parallel courses, and they are moving at the same speed.
No. Velocity is a vector that describes both the direction in which an object is moving and its speed in that direction.
It doesn't. It will change an objects direction and/or speed but its inertia that keeps it moving.
forces
Velocity also includes direction.
Speed and direction is called velocity.
They would be traveling at the same speed. Two objects moving with the same velocity must be moving in the same direction and at the same speed. The reason for this is because velocity is speed in a specified direction. Another way to say that is to say that velocity is speed with a direction vector. It is a physical quantity with magnitude and direction. Two objects moving with the same speed could be moving toward a head-on collision. Or they could be moving along convergent, divergent or skewed paths. Not so with two objects that have identical velocities. They are moving on the same or on parallel courses, and they are moving at the same speed.
No. Velocity is a vector that describes both the direction in which an object is moving and its speed in that direction.
They would be traveling at the same speed. Two objects moving with the same velocity must be moving in the same direction and at the same speed. The reason for this is because velocity is speed in a specified direction. Another way to say that is to say that velocity is speed with a direction vector. It is a physical quantity with magnitude and direction. Two objects moving with the same speed could be moving toward a head-on collision. Or they could be moving along convergent, divergent or skewed paths. Not so with two objects that have identical velocities. They are moving on the same or on parallel courses, and they are moving at the same speed.
It doesn't. It will change an objects direction and/or speed but its inertia that keeps it moving.
forces
Velocity also includes direction.
Same speed, same direction.
velocity
This is not true. Acceleration includes direction, but speed does not. Speed in a particular direction is called velocity.
A Vector quantity accounts for both magnitude and direction.
That is called speed or - if the direction is relevant - velocity.