By definition, speed = distance / time.
Velocity does depend on distance. Velocity = Distance/Time
velocity = distance/time
distance divided by velocity will give time
Distance(velocity), or D(v)
That is called the velocity of the object. Velocity = Distance divided by Time taken.
Using the formula velocity = distance / time So required velocity = 1600 / 10 x 60 = 2.667 m/s
Velocity does depend on distance. Velocity = Distance/Time
Velocity = distance / unit of time
Velocity is a vector quantity, which means that a body's speed and direction are both required to define it. They are different because: Speed is the rate of change of distance with time but velocity is the rate of change of displacement with time.
Simple, velocity = distance by time ,which probably means distance = velocity X times.
distance/velocity = time
Velocity includes direction. And it's the 'difference', not the 'distance'.
velocity = distance travelled/time taken to travel that distance
velocity = distance/time
velocity = distance/time
Velocity is distance / time
Distance Traveled is directly proportional to velocity. This is because velocity is the change in position over a period of time. The greater the velocity, the greater the distance traveled. For you calculus junkies, integrate velocity to get displacement.