Yes it is possible.
If a body goes round a circular path then distance covered by one full rotation will be 2 pi r
But the total displacement is 0.
Hence the average speed exists but average velocity does not exist.
Velocity is the slope of the position vs. time curve.
Yes, it would. That's one reason why some artificial satellites were tossed into orbit after being carried up aboard the space shuttle. The reason is because escape velocity from Earth depends on Earth's gravity, which in turn depends on the distance from the Earth's center. The higher you go, the farther you are from the center of the planet, the less gravitational force there is between you and the Earth, and the smaller the escape velocity thus becomes.
A decrease in the availiable water
Conceivable reason refers to a rational explanation or justification that is imaginable or possible based on the information or context available. It suggests a plausible or logical basis for understanding a situation, event, or decision.
The shouldn't be too difficult, but there's no way to start on it before seeing the figure. That's the main reason they gave you the figure along with the question, on the page you copied it from. I'm sorry you thought I deserved less.
The correct term is velocity, not velocity.There is no reason why an object cannot have 0 velocity and 0 average speed - relative to some fixed reference point. I assume that your school, for example, has 0 velocity and 0 average speed.
Yes, it is possible. If you are moving at a constant velocity, you will feel no acceleration or deceleration. In contrast, if you are not moving at all, you will feel stationary with no change in velocity.
The magnitude of average velocity is the total distance traveled divided by the total time taken, regardless of the direction. It gives the overall speed at which an object has moved over a certain period.
Ok, lets start with the idea that: Average Rate per second = Average Velocity Average Velocity = Change in distance/Change in time = (d2-d1)/(t2-t1) Now lets define our variables and solve for the Average Velocity: d1 = 0 m d2 = 100 m t1 = 0 s t2 = 9.86 s Average Velocity = Change in distance/Change in time = (100 m - 0 m)/(9.86 s - 0 s) = 10.14 m/s<---This is the average velocity in m/s. The reason this is the Average Velocity or Average Rate per second is because in the calculations above we didn't account for positive and negative acceleration that may have occured during the measurement of this information. Alex
Velocity is the slope of the position vs. time curve.
Motion with uniform velocity. * * * * * There is absolutely no reason for the velocity - or even speed - to remain constant. It is linear motion an that is all that there is to it.
It is a vector. It is the directed straight line distance, or displacement, between two points on the path of movement (even though the actual path may be curved) divided by the actual time taken to move from one point to the other. The reason that it is a vector is that the direction traveled is important: it is possible that part of the motion was in the opposite direction from other parts.
What are possible reason of separating accountancy department from a college department?
non optimal regional velocity applied to your seismic data
Depending on the business it may be the time that the company handles each call, the information required to complete the call and possible follow up time. Each business is different and has different protocol.
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No, it is not. Example: the average of (5 and 7) is 6, and the average of (50, 60 and 70) is 60, but if we add all five numbers we have 192, so the overall average is 192 divided by 5 = 38.4 and the reason for that is we have more and bigger numbers in the second set.