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The magnitude of both can be the same.
different on constant and instantaneous speed
d/t=s d = distance t = time s = speed the speed is actually going to be the average speed because they are practically the same thing (and for this equation speed is the exact same thing as average speed)
The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
It almost never is ... define average : ALL the different speeds divided by the number of times you measured it.
velocity is a vector and speed is scalar. Velocity has magnitude and directions, with magnitude being speed. The magnitude of average velocity and average speed is the same.
Average Speed is different from average speed becoz speed is particular while avera speed is the total distance divided from time
The magnitude of both can be the same.
Average speed is an average value of speed over a given time. If your speed is constant (not changing), then your average speed will equal your speed at any given moment in time.
different on constant and instantaneous speed
Yes. If an object is moving at a constant speed the average speed and the constant speed are the same.
d/t=s d = distance t = time s = speed the speed is actually going to be the average speed because they are practically the same thing (and for this equation speed is the exact same thing as average speed)
Distance does not affect the average speed. A car can travel 1 kilometre at an average speed of 60 km per hour, or it can travel 100 km at the same average speed.
They do have the same average speed ... it's called the air temprature. I believe you need to define average for yourself.
The same way you calculate the average speed of any object. You divide distance by time.
Average speed is a representation of all your speeds between two points, constant speed is just unchanging speed.
As long as there is no change in direction then they are effectively the same.