To calculate velocity divide the displacement by time
In a theoretical scenario with constant velocity, the true acceleration would typically be zero.
That is correct. Momentum is defined as the product of an object's mass and its velocity, not the mass divided by the velocity. The equation for momentum is p = mv, where p is momentum, m is mass, and v is velocity.
True. Velocity is the rate of change of displacement with respect to time, which is represented by the slope of the displacement versus time graph.
Acceleration is actually the rate of change of velocity over time. It is the derivative of the velocity function with respect to time. If the velocity vs time graph is a straight line, the acceleration is constant.
True. It is accelerating because the velocity constantly changes. The velocity constantly changes because the direction changes - and a velocity is made up of a magnitude, and a direction.True. It is accelerating because the velocity constantly changes. The velocity constantly changes because the direction changes - and a velocity is made up of a magnitude, and a direction.True. It is accelerating because the velocity constantly changes. The velocity constantly changes because the direction changes - and a velocity is made up of a magnitude, and a direction.True. It is accelerating because the velocity constantly changes. The velocity constantly changes because the direction changes - and a velocity is made up of a magnitude, and a direction.
Identities are statements that are true for any number.
What are three statements that are true about Francis Drake?
In a theoretical scenario with constant velocity, the true acceleration would typically be zero.
Statements that always or never hold true are called "tautologies."
It need not be true if 32.2 ft per hour is the average velocity.
Lots of statements are not true about polymers.
Lots of statements about novels are true.
Lots of statements are not true about polymers.
Lots of statements about animals are true.
Without know what statements you are referring to we cannot answer.
That depends entirely on the statements in question.
where are the statements, don't see any