The slope of a speed/time graph at any point is the acceleration at that instant.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The slope of the graph of speed vs time at each point isthe magnitude of the acceleration at that point in time.
Negative slope on a speed/time graph indicates decreasing speed. (Some call it "deceleration", although I wish they wouldn't.)
The slope of that graph at each point is the speed at that instant of time.
speed
Speed
The information given by the slope of ("on") a distance-time graph is the SPEED. The size ("magnitude") of the slope is the size of the speed and the units of the distance axis are divided by the units on the time axis to give the units of the speed ... so if your distance is in miles and time is in hours then your speed will be in miles per ("divided by") hours (mph)... but if distance is in metres and time is in seconds then the speed is in metre per second (m/s).
No. The slope on a speed vs time graph tells the acceleration.
The slope of the speed-vs-time graph is the magnitude of acceleration.
acceleration
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The slope of a distance-time graph represents speed.
That slope is the 'speed' of the motion. If the slope is changing, then the speed is changing. That's 'accelerated' motion. (It doesn't matter whether the speed is growing or shrinking. It's still 'accelerated' motion. 'Acceleration' does NOT mean 'speeding up'.)
Speed (in the radial direction) = slope of the graph.
No, but the slope of the graph does.
Slope of the graph will give you speed.