Accelerated body
velocity increases
its particles move faster
An object's momentum is affected by its mass and velocity. The momentum of an object increases as either its mass or velocity increases.
When an object undergoes acceleration, it is the velocity that increases. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so an object experiencing acceleration will have its velocity change over time, either by speeding up, slowing down, or changing direction.
Velocity increases but not infinitely.
If speed increases, or if the moving object curves up or down or to the right or to the left, or if speed decreases, any of these events is called "acceleration".
increases its velocity and momentum
If velocity decreases, an object's speed is decreasing. This could mean the object is slowing down or coming to a stop. If velocity increases, the object's speed is increasing, indicating it is moving faster.
When the Force increases on an Object, the Distance it travels INCREASES, as does its Velocity.
The velocity of a falling object increases as it falls due to the acceleration of gravity acting on it. As the object falls, it gains speed and accelerates toward the ground until it reaches a constant velocity known as terminal velocity.
The relationship between angular velocity and linear velocity in a rotating object is that they are directly proportional. This means that as the angular velocity of the object increases, the linear velocity also increases. The formula to calculate the linear velocity is linear velocity angular velocity x radius of rotation.
Positive Acceleration refers to the force acting on an object whose speed increases as it moves away from its original starting position. If the velocity is increasing along with time it is called positive acceleration, and if the velocity decreases it is negative acceleration.