On a V-t graph, constant speed is shown as a horizontal line.
Constant speed is shown on a graph using straight lines. The straight line indicates that there are no fluctuations with the speed.
On a speed versus time graph, acceleration is represented by the line on the graph. If acceleration is constant, the line cuts through equally between the axis and starts from the zero point.
That would depend on the type of axes. If it is an acceleration vs. time graph, then there would be a continual reading of 0m/s/s acceleration, and the graph would be a straight line indicating 0m/s/s at all times. If it is a velocity vs time graph, then there would be a constant value of velocity at all times. If it is a displacement vs time graph, there would be a straight, continuously increasing line.
-- If the position/time graph is a straight line, then the speed is constant, and the slope of the line is the average speed, as well as the instantaneous speed at any moment. -- If the position/time graph is not a straight line, then the average speed between two moments in time is the slope of a straight line drawn between those two points on the graph.
Constant
If the line formed by the graph is straight, the speed is constant. A horizontal line would show the object as stationary.
On a graph of velocity and time, a constant speed would appear as a straight horizontal line.
I would like to state first that you misspelled horizontal. The answer to your question is Constant speed.
At constant speed, the distance/time graph is a straight line, whose slope is equal to the speed.
Constant speed is shown on a graph using straight lines. The straight line indicates that there are no fluctuations with the speed.
A horizontal line on a speed vs time graph indicates constant speed.
constant speed
Diagonal line
The graph is a straight line. Its slope is the speed.
Constant speed..
yes
straight line