Zero position is when you are a neutral party... You aren't rooting for this team.. Nor are you rooting for the others...
The magnitude of the displacement of the windup toy is zero. Since it starts and ends at the same position, the net change in position is zero, resulting in zero displacement.
The y-intercept of a position and time graph represents the position of the object at time zero. It indicates the initial position of the object when the time is zero.
A zero height position is a vertical position ( otherwise known as up and down, north to south). It is involved in scientific energies such as POTENTIAL ENERGY.
It is in the tens position, but being a zero it is worth zero.
At a position where destructive interference is complete, the resultant displacement is zero because the waves are completely out of phase and cancel each other out. This results in a net displacement of zero at that specific position.
Yes, an object can have zero displacement if it starts and ends at the same position. This means that its overall change in position is zero, even if it may have moved around in between.
The acceleration of a pendulum at the mean position is zero because the force of gravity acting on the pendulum's mass is balanced by the tension in the string. When the pendulum is at its mean position, the forces acting on it are equal and opposite, resulting in a net force of zero and therefore zero acceleration.
That happens when the position at time "2" is the same as the position at time "1". In that case, since the difference in position is zero, the average velocity (during that time) is also zero. Note that the object under consideration may well have moved; in that case, it returned to its original position.
If you are staying in the same position and not moving, then your rate of motion is zero.
The origin.
As, in the velocity-time graph, curves passes through zero means 'when time is zero velocity is zero'. Velocity is time derivative of displacement. So displacement is maximum or minimum when time is zero in position-time graph.
The position of any number in a number line is determined by its distance from the zero.