Total distance/total time
To determine average speed, you need to know the total distance traveled and the total time taken to travel that distance. Divide the total distance by the total time to calculate the average speed.
To determine speed, you need to know the distance an object travels and the time it takes to cover that distance. Speed is calculated by dividing distance by time.
To determine velocity, you must know the object's distance traveled, the direction in which it traveled, and the time it took to travel that distance. Velocity is a vector quantity that includes both speed (magnitude) and direction.
To determine speed, you must know the distance traveled and the time taken to cover that distance. Speed is calculated as distance divided by time. You may also need to know the direction of motion if you want to determine the velocity, which includes both speed and direction.
Speed is the rate at which an object moves. To determine the rate at which that object moves, we'll have to look at a given distance that it covered when it moved, and at the time it took to cover that distance. The distance per unit of time is the speed of the object.
distance and time
To determine average speed, you need to know the total distance traveled and the total time taken to travel that distance. Divide the total distance by the total time to calculate the average speed.
To determine average speed, you need to know what distance the object traveled in meters over how long it took the object to travel that distance in seconds.
To determine speed, you need to know the distance an object travels and the time it takes to cover that distance. Speed is calculated by dividing distance by time.
To determine velocity, you must know the object's distance traveled, the direction in which it traveled, and the time it took to travel that distance. Velocity is a vector quantity that includes both speed (magnitude) and direction.
To determine speed, you must know the distance traveled and the time taken to cover that distance. Speed is calculated as distance divided by time. You may also need to know the direction of motion if you want to determine the velocity, which includes both speed and direction.
speed
If you know average speed then you cannot determine the acceleration: the very nature of being a average hides all the increases and decreases in speed which are the accelerations (technically, acceleration is change of speed in a direction). All average speed tells you is the constant speed at which you require to travel to cover the given distance in the given time; as the speed is constant, the acceleration is zero.
You first need to know what your average speed is to determine how many miles have been traveled
Speed is the rate at which an object moves. To determine the rate at which that object moves, we'll have to look at a given distance that it covered when it moved, and at the time it took to cover that distance. The distance per unit of time is the speed of the object.
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distance and time