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No. Average velocity is still a velocity.Distance is a product of (a velocity or speed) times (a length of time).
The term "velocity", as used in physics, DOES have an associated direction. Most derived terms, such as "average velocity", also do.
For example, an object goes in a circle, at a speed of 50 km/hour. The average speed is 50 km/hour; the average velocity is zero.
A sparrow is a small bird that is part of the Passeridae family. The travel at an average speed of 55 miles per hour.
velocity is just a general term for speed (it could be average velocity or instantaneous velocity). Instantaneous velocity/speed (same thing) is the speed at that second. If you are familiar with calculus, it is the derivative of the position graph. Whereas average velocity is how fast the object is going in, for example, 1 hour, it is the speed that is maintained the whole hour (or the average) Instantaneous would be that at the second, at for example t=1.425, the speed is 24m/h . something along those lines
What do you mean, an African or a European Swallow
For the instantaneous value of average velocity, average speed and average velocity are equal.
Velocity is speed and its direction. Average velocity is average speed and its direction.
velocity is a vector and speed is scalar. Velocity has magnitude and directions, with magnitude being speed. The magnitude of average velocity and average speed is the same.
No. Average velocity is still a velocity.Distance is a product of (a velocity or speed) times (a length of time).
The term "velocity", as used in physics, DOES have an associated direction. Most derived terms, such as "average velocity", also do.
0 mph. Cause it can not carry half a coconut.
An object moving in a circular path at constant speed will have a non-zero average speed and zero average velocity since velocity is a vector parameter,
their average speed is greater than their average velocity.
That is the case when you are talking about instantaneous speed and velocity - or when the velocity is constant. In the case of an average speed and velocity, this relation does not hold.
For example, an object goes in a circle, at a speed of 50 km/hour. The average speed is 50 km/hour; the average velocity is zero.
No. Average speed is.