you need to know two different positions for the moving object, and the time interval between them. Velocity is the time it took to go from point A to point B
Technically, tho- you only need two things... Distance traveled and time.
Just speed & direction.
Velocity Velocity= distance/time V=d/t
Velocity includes speed and direction.
I only know three: Velocity,Acceleration, and Force
initial velocity, angle of launch, height above ground When a projectile is launched you can calculate how far it travels horizontally if you know the height above ground it was launched from, initial velocity and the angle it was launched at. 1) Determine how long it will be in the air based on how far it has to fall (this is why you need the height above ground). 2) Use your initial velocity to determine the horizontal component of velocity 3) distance travelled horizontally = time in air (part 1) x horizontal velocity (part 2)
Just speed & direction.
If movement is in two dimensions: the x-coordinate of the velocity, and the y-coordinate of the velocity. Or alternatively: the magnitude of the velocity, and the direction. If movement is in three dimensions, you need to know three things, for example, x-coordinate, y-coordinate, and z-coordinate of the velocity, or magnitude of the velocity and two components of direction.
The three things that determine how thick or thin magma is temperature, silica content, and gas content.
You need to know its direction. Put that togetherwith the speed, and you'll have the velocity.
no, you need to know its initial velocity to determine this; if initial velocity is zero then distance is 1/2 acceleration x time squared
Velocity.
Velocity Velocity= distance/time V=d/t
Velocity Velocity= distance/time V=d/t
You need to know their mass. p=mv momentum=Mass times Velocity
You need to know their mass. p=mv momentum=Mass times Velocity
Velocity includes speed and direction.
"time"