Interfacial velocity is the speed of a fluid whose movement is generated by its mass transfer from a phase to the next . Another factor that generates interfacial velocity is the bulk motion of the fluid, known as advection.
Velocity is a speed in a very specific direction.
They have exactly the same size. The difference is that 'velocity' tells you which way the 'speed' is going.
the rate of change in the velocity of a body
Exactly correct.
Not sure what you mean exactly. At constant velocity, the distance travelled is proportional to the time.
If the velocity is uniform, then the final velocity and the initial velocity are the same. Perhaps you meant to say uniform acceleration. In any event, the question needs to be stated more precisely.
It's a scrambled equation. What you meant to say is, "The absolute value of velocity equals speed."
Speed is exactly like velocity, except velocity has a fixed direction. So speed would be 50mph, whereas velocity would be 50mph NE
Not exactly. Let me explain:Speed is one part of velocity. If you're measuring velocity, you have to know thespeed. But that's not all. For velocity, you also have to know the direction.
If you plotted the original path and velocity, and the path and velocity of the 'impacting' force, then the third leg of the triangle will be the resultant path and velocity.
terminal velocity
Yes, exactly.