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speed and direction
speed and direction.
Total distance/total time
Speed and direction.
speed and direction
speed and direction
speed and direction.
distance and time
Total distance/total time
speed = distance / time, that's the most basic formula that uses two things to get value for speed
We can only tell average speed from those two pieces of information. 3,000 miles in 5 hours equals an average speed of 600 mph.
Average speed can be used to measure the distance traveled by an object when the acceleration is constant. x = v * t. When acceleration is a constant, the average speed can be plugged into the equation with time to yield distance.
No. If the speed is always zero, then the average of its speed at any two points in time is also zero.
The 2 things are speed and distance.
3m/s
Average speed is a representation of all your speeds between two points, constant speed is just unchanging speed.
The instantaneous speed is the speed of a moving body at an instant. Average speed is the overall speed through a period of time. These are two important aspects of differentiation in calculus.