Based on Australian traffic regulations, if you are referring to the distance between your own car and the car ahead of you, then the distance is the equivalent of 3 seconds based on the road speed limit. This is usually about 10 car lengths on a 60 kph road. This is supposed to be the average safe reflexive response time needed to avoid any sudden stops or swerves of the car ahead.
But this may not answer your question accurately because the time needed is also based on the individual driver's response time, impulsive decisive action, vehicle response, available space to take an action, other vehicles or objects involved whether moving or stationary, weather or road conditions, obscurity of further hazards, then there is the other driver's response time... There are too many variables in the equation if you plan on driving your life on the borderline.
Make it simple... stay 5 seconds away from the car ahead, be more alert, eat,, drink and sleep well before driving, don't consume any physically altering substances, concentrate on the road and steer clear of other vehicles. It also helps if you don't have road rage, people make mistakes and you should drive expecting EVERYONE else to make them very often. Hopefully, if any collisions still occur, they would be minor and you will be safe.
have time to react and avoid a collision.
The captain was not present at the time of the collision but the First Officer DID give commands to avoid the berg - rather than risk a head-on collision.
A boat collision occurs when the bearing between two boats remains constant over time, indicating that they are on a collision course. This is a dangerous situation that requires immediate evasive action to avoid a potential impact.
You have enough time to avoid a collision Source: Boat Tennessee-Responsible Boating
You have enough time to avoid a collision Source: Boat Tennessee-Responsible Boating
You have enough time to avoid a collision Source: Boat Tennessee-Responsible Boating
I'm having difficulty answering that question tactfully. The captain of the ship tactfully tacked in time to avoid a collision.
The ship was travelling too fast to avoid the iceberg. When the look-out navigators spotted the berg, they attempted to swerve but did not have enough time to change their direction to avoid the collision.
We need to eat at the right time to avoid ulcer & hungry
fix it when you can safely and avoid collision and cops/ pull over at the correct time and secure it again
average time, an electron spends between two successive collision, is called relaxation time and time spent by electron at point of contact, is called collision time
Assuming the question means you cannot avoid the collision: Brake, leave the car in gear if manual, and keep in a straight line. Your car is designed to absorb straight on impacts much more safely then rotational impacts, so if you must take a hit, do so straight on.