No. This graph indicates an object moving at the same speed during different times. Steady acceleration would be indicated by a horizontal line through a graph with time on the horizontal axis and ACCELERATION on the vertical one.
Note for future reference:
Horizontal Axis = x/independent axis
Vertical Axis = y/dependent axis
On a distance-time graph, a constant speed is represented by a straight, diagonal line with a constant slope. This slope indicates that the object is covering the same distance for each unit of time, meaning its speed is consistent throughout the motion.
A straight line on a distance/time graph means that the speed is constant. In every unit of time the distance increases by the same amount.
If the distance/time graph is a straight line that makes a constant angel with the time axis, then the body's speed is constant, and is equal to the slope of the straight line (tangent of the constant angel).
Constant speed is shown on a graph using straight lines. The straight line indicates that there are no fluctuations with the speed.
No, distance does not affect the body's acceleration when moving in a straight line with constant acceleration. The acceleration of an object depends only on the force acting on it, not the distance it travels. The acceleration will remain constant unless a different force is applied.
Yes. The slope, or rate, is constant. The rate being represented is speed. If the slope is a negative constant, the object is losing distance (going towards) from the orgin at at a constant speed.
Yes. Speed is the rate at which distance changes over time. In calculus terms v = dx/dt, or the slope of the distance vs. time graph. If the slope of the distance vs. time graph is a straight line, the speed is constant.
On a distance-time graph, a constant speed is represented by a straight, diagonal line with a constant slope. This slope indicates that the object is covering the same distance for each unit of time, meaning its speed is consistent throughout the motion.
Well, no. If the graph is a straight diagonal line, then the DISTANCE is steadily increasing, not the speed. This would translate into a constant speed. If the speed is steadily increasing, the object would travel more distance per unit time as we move along the horizontal axis. Meaning, the graph would curve upward.
The answer is TRUE because it is a straight line as the graph shows below. http://www.batesville.k12.in.us/physics/apphynet/Measurement/Images/d_vs_t2_graph.gif
The answer is TRUE because it is a straight line as the graph shows below. http://www.batesville.k12.in.us/physics/apphynet/Measurement/Images/d_vs_t2_graph.gif
It means that either the distance is measured from the starting-line and the object is moving forward, or else the distance is measured from the finish-line and the object is moving backwards, because the distance is growing as time goes on. If the upward sloping diagonal line is straight, it means the speed is constant. (not velocity)
A straight line on a distance - time graph represents a "constant velocity".
A straight diagonal line on a distance-time graph represents an object moving with uniform motion. This line shows a constant speed where the distance covered increases at a steady rate over time.
A straight line on a distance/time graph means that the speed is constant. In every unit of time the distance increases by the same amount.
straight line
A constant rate on a graph is typically represented by a straight, diagonal line. This indicates that the change in one variable is consistent with respect to the change in another variable, such as time. For example, if you graph distance versus time for an object moving at a steady speed, the slope of the line remains constant, reflecting the constant rate of motion.