The types of forces that determine whether an object remains at rest or moves at a constant velocity are balanced forces. If the forces acting on an object are equal in size and opposite in direction, the object will remain at rest. If the forces are balanced and in the same direction, the object will move at a constant velocity.
Acceleration describes whether an object's velocity has increased or decreased over time. An object has positive acceleration if its velocity is increasing, negative acceleration if its velocity is decreasing, and zero acceleration if its velocity is constant.
Velocity is a quantity that has magnitude and direction. The magnitude of velocity is what we call "speed".If the velocity is constant, then its magnitude and direction are both constant.Constant magnitude means constant speed.So the answer to the question is "Yes".
The mass of an object remains constant regardless of a change in gravity. This means that an object will have the same amount of matter whether it is on Earth, the Moon, or in space.
If the curve is horizontal, then the speed is constant. If that horizontal graph lies on the x-axis, then the constant speed is zero, and the object is stationary.
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It can be positive, negative, or zero depending on whether the object is speeding up, slowing down, or maintaining a constant velocity. Mathematically, acceleration is defined as the derivative of velocity with respect to time.
yes, if it has a constant acceleration of 0m/s2
EMG can determine whether a particular muscle is responding appropriately to stimulation, and whether a muscle remains inactive when not stimulated
Acceleration describes whether an object's velocity has increased or decreased over time. An object has positive acceleration if its velocity is increasing, negative acceleration if its velocity is decreasing, and zero acceleration if its velocity is constant.
Velocity is a quantity that has magnitude and direction. The magnitude of velocity is what we call "speed".If the velocity is constant, then its magnitude and direction are both constant.Constant magnitude means constant speed.So the answer to the question is "Yes".
The mass of an object remains constant regardless of a change in gravity. This means that an object will have the same amount of matter whether it is on Earth, the Moon, or in space.
EMG can determine whether a particular muscle is responding appropriately to stimulation, and whether a muscle remains inactive when not stimulated.
If the curve is horizontal, then the speed is constant. If that horizontal graph lies on the x-axis, then the constant speed is zero, and the object is stationary.
A scatter plot can be used to see if there is any relationship between two variables. It can also give a general idea of the nature of that relationship (linear, quadratic, logarithmic, inverse square, etc; whether or not the relationship remains constant over the domain, whether or not the variation remains constant (homoscedasticity), and so on.
Yes
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It can be positive, negative, or zero depending on whether the object is speeding up, slowing down, or maintaining a constant velocity. Mathematically, acceleration is defined as the derivative of velocity with respect to time.
For an object moving with uniform motion, the equation of motion does not change. The equation remains the same as it describes the relationship between an object's position, velocity, and time regardless of whether the motion is uniform or non-uniform. Uniform motion implies constant velocity, so the acceleration term in the equation of motion is zero.
Yes. Velocity implies both a magnitude and a direction. An object going around in a circle moves at a constant speed, but the direction, and therefore the velocity, is changing.Yes. Velocity implies both a magnitude and a direction. An object going around in a circle moves at a constant speed, but the direction, and therefore the velocity, is changing.Yes. Velocity implies both a magnitude and a direction. An object going around in a circle moves at a constant speed, but the direction, and therefore the velocity, is changing.Yes. Velocity implies both a magnitude and a direction. An object going around in a circle moves at a constant speed, but the direction, and therefore the velocity, is changing.