Velocity does depend on distance. Velocity = Distance/Time
velocity and distance.
velocity = distance/time
distance divided by velocity will give time
Distance(velocity), or D(v)
That is called the velocity of the object. Velocity = Distance divided by Time taken.
The distance doesn't depend on the mass.
velocity and distance.
Gravitational forces between objects depend only on their masses and the distance between them. Velocity has no effect.
Velocity = distance / unit of time
Simple, velocity = distance by time ,which probably means distance = velocity X times.
distance/velocity = time
Velocity includes direction. And it's the 'difference', not the 'distance'.
velocity = distance travelled/time taken to travel that distance
velocity = distance/time
velocity = distance/time
Velocity is distance / time
Distance Traveled is directly proportional to velocity. This is because velocity is the change in position over a period of time. The greater the velocity, the greater the distance traveled. For you calculus junkies, integrate velocity to get displacement.