In uniform motion, object travel at fixed and constant speed and uniformly accelerated motion the speed of the object increases uniformly.
yes, acceleration is constant in uniform circular motion
It means that acceleration is constant. This meaning that velocity is varying with respect to time, we see this by this formula (v - v(initial) ) / t (Time).
A parachute is not uniformly accelerated because it experiences air resistance, which increases as the parachute opens and slows down the descent of the object. This non-uniform acceleration is caused by the changing forces acting on the parachute as it falls through the air.
The purpose and function of the word "rewarded" here are very unclear, as is the thrust of the question. Uniform circular motion IS uniformly accelerated motion, since the direction of the motion is constantly changing.
No, the uniform requirements are the same.
From a kinematic perspective, just observing the motion of an object, we can say that an object is experiencing uniform acceleration if the magnitude of the object's velocity changes at a constant rate but maintains the same direction. From a dynamic perspective, as a consequence of Newton's second law, we know that whenever the net force on an object is constant (in magnitude and direction) the object will undergo uniform acceleration.
Because it's worn uniformly by all personnel in the Army.
No, acceleration is not uniform in uniformly circular motion. In uniformly circular motion, the direction of the velocity vector is constantly changing, which means there is always a centripetal acceleration acting towards the center of the circle. This centripetal acceleration is not constant in magnitude, making the overall acceleration not uniform.
Accelerated because when a body changes its direction It will accelerate.
Uniform linear motion is not accelerated because the speed of the object remains constant and there is no change in direction. Acceleration refers to any change in speed or direction of an object, and when there is no change in these factors, the motion is considered uniform and not accelerated.
A heterogeneous mixture is not uniformly mixed and contains visibly different substances, such as a salad with distinct ingredients. A homogeneous mixture is uniformly mixed at a molecular level, like salt dissolved in water, resulting in a uniform appearance throughout.
The way I understand it, a continuos function is said not to be "uniformly continuous" if for a given small difference in "x", the corresponding difference in the function value can be arbitrarily large. For more information, check the article "Uniform continuity" in the Wikipedia, especially the examples.