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Instantaneous velocity: The velocity of an object at one moment in time.
Instantaneous velocity is the velocity of an object at a specific moment in time.
An objects speed at any particular moment in time is known as its instantaneous velocity. This is the rate of change or the derivative of the objects position.
the answer is velocity
That is called the velocity of the object. Velocity = Distance divided by Time taken.
Instantaneous velocity: The velocity of an object at one moment in time.
Instantaneous velocity is the velocity of an object at a specific moment in time.
An objects speed at any particular moment in time is known as its instantaneous velocity. This is the rate of change or the derivative of the objects position.
the answer is velocity
That is called the velocity of the object. Velocity = Distance divided by Time taken.
velocity (distance/time)
The slope of a velocity-time graph that shows uniform acceleration is the actual acceleration. Instantaneous velocity is the velocity of a body at a particular moment in time.
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"
Velocity is displacement divided by time
Yes, of course; but it will only have zero velocity for one infinitesimal moment. Check your calculus text.
Yes. For example, if you throw an object up into the air, this will happen when it reaches the highest point. At that moment, its velocity is zero; on the other hand, at any moment, the object is accelerating downward at 9.8 meters per square second.
it can be calculated at a particular instant as it is total displacement in given time