I assume you mean the velocity of the earth around the sun. As the earth is 93 million miles from the sun, as it orbits the sun it traces out an approximate circle (actually a slight elipse) of radius 93 million miles. Using circumference = 2 X PI X radius, the circumference is 584,335,740 miles. It traces this distance out every year (actually 365 and one quarter days - the time for one orbit) so using velocity = distance divided by time, its velocity is 584,335,740 / 365 1/4 = 1,599,824 miles every day. As there are 24 hours in a day the speed is therefore 1,599,824 divided by 24 which is 66,659 mph.
To calculate the change in velocity of an object, you subtract the initial velocity from the final velocity. The formula is: Change in velocity Final velocity - Initial velocity.
it's velocity...it's velocity...
When calculating acceleration to find the change in velocity, you subtract the initial velocity from the final velocity. The formula for acceleration is: acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time.
Yes. Zero velocity is a velocity; if it is always zero then it is a constant velocity.
the object's 'velocity'
Velocity slope refers to the rate at which velocity changes over time. A positive velocity slope indicates an increase in velocity, while a negative velocity slope indicates a decrease in velocity. The steeper the slope, the greater the rate of change in velocity.
velocity is a vector quantity. Its magnitude is given by (velocity)= (distance)/(time)
Muzzle velocity is the velocity of a bullet as it leaves the firearm's barrel, while recoil velocity is the backward momentum that the firearm experiences when the bullet is fired. Muzzle velocity determines the bullet's speed and trajectory, while recoil velocity affects the shooter's ability to control the firearm during and after firing.
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.
Non uniform velocity is known as variable velocity.
That is called "velocity".That is called "velocity".That is called "velocity".That is called "velocity".
Instantaneous velocity and average velocity are not the same. Instantaneous velocity is the velocity at a specific moment in time, while average velocity is the total displacement over a given time interval. In general, they will not have the same value unless the motion is at a constant velocity.