It is probably a shift solenoid is going bad and not letting it downshift correctly. This is a common problem on these vehicles. The shift solenoids are located in the transmission, you have to drop the pan to access them.
Not at all. However Gravity can impart an acceleration - Gravitational acceleration.
In physics there is no such thing as an "acceleration force". A force however will produce an acceleration, according to Newton's Second Law: F=ma, or force = mass x acceleration. Solving for acceleration: acceleration = force / mass
That is sometimes called deceleration. In physics, however, any change of velocity is simply called "acceleration".
In general, you can't feel speed - only changes in speed (acceleration). "Acceleration" in physics includes a change of direction. So, the Earth's orbit involves acceleration. However, the acceleration is too slow to be felt.
In ways Soccer can be a form of acceleration however it depends on the ways people think about it, such as maybe PI but its all on what you think.
If acceleration varies with time, it can of course AT ONE PARTICULAR INSTANT be equal to zero. However, it can't both change over time and remain at zero all the time.
Yes. The acceleration is directly proportional to the objects mass.For objects with constant mass however, the acceleration will remain constant.
I believe during a sneeze that your body just before hesitates to breath due to the amount of air being forced out of the lungs.. however I am not a doctor...
distance per time2 is acceleration, yes. Note however, it's per, not pre
Average acceleration will be equal to instantaneous acceleration when an object has an uniform acceleration throughout its motion. Example : A car accelerating at 1m/s2 uniformly in a straight line.
In general, nowhere, because acceleration is the second derivative of distance with respect to time. However, in the special case of a constant acceleration, the acceleration will be twice the slope of the line, since distance = 0.5 * time squared.
No it does not, however they are compatible.