no because the car has a steering wheel.
No. Velocity includes a direction vector, which speed does not have.
Velocity is a vector quantity that includes both speed and direction. If the velocity is changing, it means either the speed, direction, or both are changing. Therefore, if the velocity is changing, the object cannot maintain a constant speed.
Acceleration is the CHANGE in velocity; you're assuming CONSTANT velocity. So the acceleration is zero.
No, if an object's velocity is constant, then its speed must also be constant. Velocity is a vector quantity that accounts for both the magnitude (speed) and direction of motion, so if the velocity is constant, both speed and direction will remain the same.
An object experiencing a constant velocity has zero acceleration. This is because acceleration is defined as the rate of change of velocity over time. When velocity is constant, there is no change in velocity, leading to zero acceleration.
Yes. Zero velocity is a velocity; if it is always zero then it is a constant velocity.
No, an object cannot have constant velocity and variable speed. Velocity is a vector quantity that includes both speed and direction. If the object's velocity is constant, then its speed must also be constant.
If your velocity is constant, then your acceleration is zero.
constant slope. really anything will work as long as it stays the same. so if your line is straight then you have a constant velocity. :)
Yes, it is. Trajectory also depends of direction of acceleration, not only it's magnitude. When you consider circular orbit, the agnitude of centripetal acceleration is constant, but the vector directions changes every moment to point constantly at the center.
An object in uniform circular motion undergoes constant acceleration but moves at constant "speed".Constant "velocity" means no acceleration.
Yes, speed is the scalar of velocity.
Constant velocity means constant speed in a straight line.
No, an object cannot accelerate if its velocity is constant. Acceleration is defined as the rate of change of velocity, so if the velocity of an object is constant, its acceleration is zero.
An object traveling at constant velocity cannot have acceleration because acceleration is the rate of change of velocity over time. If the velocity of an object is constant, there is no change in velocity and therefore no acceleration.
If constant motion means constant velocity then, total distance / total time = avg velocity => avg speed constant velocity => avg velocity = velocity
Flow velocity and area are inversely related in a fluid system. When the area decreases, the flow velocity increases, and vice versa, according to the principle of continuity, which states that the product of cross-sectional area and flow velocity remains constant in an enclosed system with steady flow.