If you are decreasing velocity, you are undergoing negative acceleration.
If the velocity is decreasing, then the acceleration is in the opposite direction of the velocity. This means the acceleration is negative, indicating deceleration.
If displacement is decreasing, then velocity can be positive, negative, or zero, depending on the direction of motion. If the object is moving in the positive direction, a decreasing displacement may result in a positive velocity. If the object is moving in the negative direction, a decreasing displacement may lead to a negative velocity. If the object is stationary and its displacement is decreasing, the velocity is zero.
As we know , resistance(R) is directly proportional to length(L) of conductor and resistence(R) is inversely proportional to current (I) and I=nAqv (v is drift velocity) So , if we decrease the length of the conductor , resistance of the conductor will decrease and current(I) will increase and drift velocity of free electrons will increase . And as we know resistance and temperature have direct relation so , by decreasing the temperature resistence will decrease and current will increase . So drift velocity will increase .
If the final velocity is less than the initial velocity, the object is decreasing speed. The object has slowed down or its speed has decreased compared to when it started.
No, they are not the same. Decreasing acceleration refers to a decrease in the rate at which an object's velocity is changing, whereas deceleration specifically refers to a decrease in the object's velocity. So, while decreasing acceleration can lead to deceleration, they are not synonymous terms.
If the velocity is decreasing, then the acceleration is in the opposite direction of the velocity. This means the acceleration is negative, indicating deceleration.
If displacement is decreasing, then velocity can be positive, negative, or zero, depending on the direction of motion. If the object is moving in the positive direction, a decreasing displacement may result in a positive velocity. If the object is moving in the negative direction, a decreasing displacement may lead to a negative velocity. If the object is stationary and its displacement is decreasing, the velocity is zero.
Decreasing the mass or Decreasing the velocity
As we know , resistance(R) is directly proportional to length(L) of conductor and resistence(R) is inversely proportional to current (I) and I=nAqv (v is drift velocity) So , if we decrease the length of the conductor , resistance of the conductor will decrease and current(I) will increase and drift velocity of free electrons will increase . And as we know resistance and temperature have direct relation so , by decreasing the temperature resistence will decrease and current will increase . So drift velocity will increase .
deacceleration
If the final velocity is less than the initial velocity, the object is decreasing speed. The object has slowed down or its speed has decreased compared to when it started.
That an object is losing speed. It is experiencing negative acceleration.
if there is a slope, the velocity is either increasing or decreasing. This is acceleration.
It doesn't. But velocity does effect mass : as velocity increases, mass increases.
No, they are not the same. Decreasing acceleration refers to a decrease in the rate at which an object's velocity is changing, whereas deceleration specifically refers to a decrease in the object's velocity. So, while decreasing acceleration can lead to deceleration, they are not synonymous terms.
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. If an object's velocity is increasing, it is accelerating positively. If its velocity is decreasing, it is accelerating negatively.
Deceleration. Negative acceleration = Velocity is decreasing by time. Positive acceleration = Velocity is increasing by time. Zero acceleration = Velocity is the same by time.