The velocity of an object at a particular instant or at a particular point of its path is called instantaneous velocity.
In another word, the instantaneous velocity of an object is defined as the limiting value of the average velocity of the object in a small time interval around that instant , when the time interval approaches zero.
v = dx/dt , where dx/dt is the differential coefficient of displacement "x" w.r.t. time "t"
Yes it is. That definition is correct.
the velocity increases at a constant rate
Instantaneous velocity: The velocity of an object at one moment in time.
Instantaneous speed is the magnitude of the velocity. Velocity also states the [direction] of the speed.
Velocity is always a scalar, instantaneous or average doesn't matter.
Yes it is. That definition is correct.
v(t) = dsdt This should be the formula for instantaneous velocity.
the velocity increases at a constant rate
Instantaneous velocity: The velocity of an object at one moment in time.
Instantaneous velocity is the velocity in difference displacement in shortest time or specific time interval.
Instantaneous speed is the magnitude of the velocity. Velocity also states the [direction] of the speed.
Instantaneous.
Velocity is always a scalar, instantaneous or average doesn't matter.
The tangent at a point on the position-time graph represents the instantaneous velocity. 1. The tangent is the instantaneous slope. 2. Rather than "average" velocity, the slope gives you "instantaneous" velocity. The average of the instantaneous gives you average velocity.
Mainly, when the velocity doesn't change. Also, in the case of varying velocity, the instantaneous velocity might, for a brief instant, be equal to the average velocity.
Instantaneous velocity is a vector quantity representing the velocity Vi at any point.It is the time rate of change in displacement.
The average velocity over an time interval is the average of the instantaneous velocities for all instants over that period. Conversely, as the time interval is reduced, the average velocity comes closer and closer to the instantaneous velocity.