Rate in a reaction and rate used in calculus. dA/dt=rate.
The time it takes for a reaction to occur is a function of the reaction rate constant and the amount of reactants. However, how long it takes for a reaction of occur completely depends on the type of reaction it is -- what the order of the reaction is. A first or second order reaction reaction will occur much faster earlier on, but slows down significantly once the reactants are depleted. The rate of a zero order reaction is constants regardless of the concentration of the reactants.
The Instantaneous rate, or the rate of decomposition at a specific time, can be determined by finding the slope of a straight line tangent to the curver at that instant.
The unit of the rate constant in a 1st Order reaction rate equation (NOT the 'Arrhenius equation', as stated in the question) is One over Time.General form of a reaction rate equation :rate (mol.L-1.time-1) = [rate constant(Ln-1.mol1-n.time-1)]*[Concentration()]nwhere:* n is the Order of the rate equation (that is of the rate limiting step) * all units are (italicalised) between brackets It can easily be seen in this that for n=1 (1st Order) the equation is:r = k * C1and in units:mol.L-1.time-1 = (L0.mol0.time-1)*(mol.L-1)1so:(mol.L-1.time-1) = (time-1)*(mol.L-1)Only the value of the rate constant k is depending on temperature only (cf. Arrhenius equation), though temperature is NOT in its unit.
flow rate x time
Agitation affects reaction rate by increasing the amount of collisions the atoms make with one another, therefore speeding up the reaction rate.
Generally: RATE = DISTANCE / TIME -or- DISTANCE = RATE * TIME -or- TIME = DISTANCE / RATE qed
The formula is Distance=Rate x Time (or distance equals rate multiplied by time). When you take this into account, you can manipulate it to solve for rate or time instead of distance. In other words, you could rewrite it as Rate= Distance/Time (rate equals distance divided by time) and Time= Distance/Rate (time equals distance divided by rate) in case they ask for what the Rate or Time is instead of Distance.
distance = rate x time the distance is increased or decreased in direct proportion to the rate or time. If the rate doubles the distance doubles in given time; If the time doubles the distance doubles at a given rate.
an interest rate changes with time
Use a stopwatch.
Time rate means how much it cost or you charge for a set amount of time. Time rate can be a fee per hour or a fee per day.
If you take distance divided by rate you will get your time. Then if you take time by the rate you will get your distance.
Distance = (rate)(time). Where distance is equal to the rate times the time.
Distance = Rate x Time Rate = Distance/Time, not Time/Distance
A long generation time makes for a slow evolution rate, and a short generation time makes for a fast evolution rate.
The first: rate*time*people = cost.
The time rate is working over the agreed amount of hours.