Wiki User
∙ 2012-05-24 12:45:37No. A distance divided by a speed is a time, not a speed.
If you want to get the average speed, you have to divide the total distance by the total time.
No. A distance divided by a speed is a time, not a speed.
If you want to get the average speed, you have to divide the total distance by the total time.
No. A distance divided by a speed is a time, not a speed.
If you want to get the average speed, you have to divide the total distance by the total time.
No. A distance divided by a speed is a time, not a speed.
If you want to get the average speed, you have to divide the total distance by the total time.
Wiki User
∙ 2012-05-24 12:45:37Wiki User
∙ 2012-05-24 12:45:37No. A distance divided by a speed is a time, not a speed.
If you want to get the average speed, you have to divide the total distance by the total time.
the answer is average speed
The object's average speed during that period of time.
Velocity Average speed= distance traveled/total time of travel
(change in distance) divided by (time interval) = the object's average speed during that time interval.
speed
No. The total distance traveled divided by constant speed is the time interval.
No. If you divide a distance by a speed, you get a time, not a speed. For example, (meters) / (meters/second) = (seconds).
No. The average speed would be the distance traveled divided by the elapsed time.
Speed Average speed- the total distance traveled divided by the time it takes to travel that distance Velocity is also the distance or displacement divided by the time
the answer is average speed
Not quite. Flip it. Average speed = (distance traveled) divided by the (time for the distance).
In physics, total distance/TIME is average speed, so this is false. Velocity should be switched out with TIME.
correct
average speed
Average speed = (distance traveled) divided by (time to travel that distance).
That's the average speed.
The average speed.