speed times distance equals horizantal speed.
That whatever is moving has stopped, if it is a speed-time graph. If it is, then you measure the horizontal line with the x axis which is presumably time, then you can find out how long the thing stopped.
The independent variable, in this case time, is on the horizontal axis of a speed graph.
The horizontal speed of an object affects its trajectory by determining how far it will travel horizontally before hitting the ground. A higher horizontal speed will result in a longer horizontal distance traveled before hitting the ground, while a lower horizontal speed will result in a shorter distance.
The horizontal speed of the projectile remains constant as there is no force acting in the horizontal direction to change it. Therefore, the horizontal speed of the projectile after 3 seconds will remain at 4 m/s.
Assuming it is a spped v/s time graph, a horizontal line represents motion at a constant speed.
No. If the horizontal axis is time, and the vertical axis is speed, and you're standing still,Then the graph is perfectly horizontal, and it coincides with the horizontal axis.
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constant speed
A constant speed.
Constant speed..
yes
No, horizontal speed does not affect gravity. Gravity acts vertically and is the same for all objects regardless of their horizontal speed. However, horizontal speed can affect the trajectory of an object's motion in relation to gravity.