Your acceleration vs. Time graph is the slope of your velocity vs. time graph
To create an acceleration-time graph from a velocity-time graph, you need to find the slope of the velocity-time graph at each point. The slope represents the acceleration at that specific instant. Plot these acceleration values against time to get the acceleration-time graph.
Yes!
No, acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It is the derivative of the velocity function, not the slope of the velocity vs. time graph. The slope of the velocity vs. time graph represents the rate of change of velocity, not acceleration.
The graph of velocity-time is the acceleration.
Acceleration can be found by computing the slope of a velocity vs. time graph. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity over time, so the slope of a velocity vs. time graph represents this change in velocity.
It will measure acceleration in the direction towards or away from the origin.
The area under an acceleration-time graph is equal to the object's velocity (not change in velocity).
A position time graph can show you velocity. As time changes, so does position, and the velocity of the object can be determined. For a speed time graph, you can derive acceleration. As time changes, so does velocity, and the acceleration of the object can be determined.If you are plotting velocity (speed) versus time, the slope is the acceleration.
No. Slope of position/time graph is speed, or magnitude of velocity.Slope of speed/time graph is magnitude of acceleration.
Ahorizontal line on a velocity vs time graph does not indicate any acceleration because there is no slope. Speed remains constant.
In a displacement-time graph, the gradient represents velocity. In a velocity-time graph, the gradient represents acceleration.
To determine velocity from an acceleration-time graph, you can find the area under the curve of the graph. This area represents the change in velocity over time. By calculating this area, you can determine the velocity at any given point on the graph.