Want this question answered?
no
It will take less time.
The answer is 45 degrees. If given the same velocity, and thrown at say...10 degrees, to the ground, then the distance it would travel is the same as the distance it would travel if it were thrown 80 degrees. Complementary angles end up at the same distance horizontally.
Such an object is said to travel at a constant speed. If it doesn't change direction, it is also said to travel at constant velocity.
Galleleo was famous for discovering that everything that you drop at the same distance will travel at the same speed, unless the air resistance is different for example dropping a rock and a flat piece of paper, the rock will hit the ground first, but if you drop a rock and and a crincked piece of paper they will fall at the same distance
no
no because they are not all the same size and and so they will travel different distances =) (santiya)
Yes. 'Serial' transmission means all bits travel the same channel, one at a time. 'Parallel' transmission means several bits travel several channels, at the same time.
Chaff is the husk or material covering the seed. Hull, etc. Bits and pieces that are lighter than the seed and carried away by a sifting process. It means the same in the Bible. Most of the time, though, Bible writers were using it as an analogy. That is, they were making a comparison between someone's or some other nation's actions to chaff blowing away in the wind. In Bible times, chaff was separated from the grain by tossing the threshed heads into the air when there was a breeze, and allowing the wind to separate the chaff and grain. It's a practice still followed in the undeveloped and sometimes developing world.
If you travel less distance in the same time, you are traveling slower.
Yes. Time is a function of distance and speed, and independent of the method of achieving that speed over the distance. time = distance ÷ speed
At full speed an airplane can travel 3500 miles with the wind in 5 hours but it requires 7 hours to travel the same distance against the wind?
So, what is the question? - Well, you would need a greater speed, to travel a longer distance in the same time.
No, even if going around in a circle is counted, the distance is the same.
They don't really travel at the same speed, but, on television, the distance they travel is so short, that the difference between the speed of sound and the speed of light is almost non-existant.
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.
It's the same distance no matter how long takes you. The distance is 24,901 miles.