Very simply . . . you're not likely to ever see a velocity graph. At least not
until you get into advanced engineering or science.
Velocity is speed and its direction . . . more information than can be displayed
on a simple graph.
A body moving at a uniform speed may have a uniform velocity, or its velocity could be changing. How could that be? Let's look. The difference between speed and velocity is that velocity is speed.
Speed and velocity are both measures of how fast an object is moving. The key difference between the two is that velocity includes direction, while speed does not. Velocity is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude (speed) and direction, while speed is a scalar quantity, only having magnitude.
The main difference between speed and velocity is that speed is a scalar quantity, representing only magnitude, while velocity is a vector quantity, representing both magnitude and direction. Speed describes how fast an object is moving, while velocity describes the rate of change of an object's position in a particular direction.
The difference between an object's speed and an object's velocity is that the object's speed is how fast it is going, and the object's velocity is how many units of speed the object has traveled.
Speed is a scalar quantity that reflects how fast an object is moving, while velocity is a vector quantity that includes both speed and direction. Speed is the magnitude of velocity. Velocity provides a more comprehensive description of an object's motion compared to speed.
speed does not indicate direction, so there is no negative on the graph.
-- Pick two points on the graph. -- Find the difference in time between the two points. -- Find the difference in displacement between the same two points. -- (Difference in displacement) divided by (difference in time) is the average Speed . You can't tell anything about velocity from the graph except its magnitude, because the graph displays no information regarding the direction of motion.
Speed is what it is: speed. Velocity is speed in a given direction, a vector quantity.
A body moving at a uniform speed may have a uniform velocity, or its velocity could be changing. How could that be? Let's look. The difference between speed and velocity is that velocity is speed.
Speed is just a number; velocity includes information about the direction. In physical terms, speed is a scalar, whereas velocity is a vector.
No. What you've described is instantaneous acceleration. To lift the average speed from a graph, you need a graph of distance-time. Pick two points in time, and find the distance at both those times. The average speed over that time interval is (difference between the distances at the beginning and end) divided by (difference between the two times). If you're just going for the average, then it doesn't matter what happened during the interval, only the values at the end-points. The slope of the line tangent to the curve on your distance-time graph is the instantaneous speed at that point in time. We're saying "speed" in this discussion because there's actually no such thing as a graph of velocity. No simple thing anyway. Velocity is a vector, whose magnitude is speed and which includes a direction. It's easy to graph speed vs time, but not that easy to graph direction vs time. So all the graph shows is speed.
Speed is just a number; velocity includes information about the direction. In physical terms, speed is a scalar, whereas velocity is a vector.
Velocity includes direction. And it's the 'difference', not the 'distance'.
Speed is the rate of change in distance, whereas velocity is speed and direction of travel. Acceleration is the change in velocity (including direction).
No, average speed is not the slope of a velocity vs. time graph; rather, it is represented by the total distance traveled divided by the total time taken. The slope of a velocity vs. time graph indicates acceleration, which is the change in velocity over time. Average speed can be derived from the area under a speed vs. time graph, but it does not equate to the slope of a velocity vs. time graph.
Speed is exactly like velocity, except velocity has a fixed direction. So speed would be 50mph, whereas velocity would be 50mph NE
Speed and velocity are both measures of how fast an object is moving. The key difference between the two is that velocity includes direction, while speed does not. Velocity is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude (speed) and direction, while speed is a scalar quantity, only having magnitude.