Slope just means "rate of change", so you can rephrase your question as "what do you call the rate of change in velocity over time?". When you look at it this way it's more apparent that the answer is acceleration. Hope this helps.
Magnitude of acceleration (but conveys no information
regarding acceleration's direction).
The rate of Change in acceleration.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The tangent at a point on the position-time graph represents the instantaneous velocity. 1. The tangent is the instantaneous slope. 2. Rather than "average" velocity, the slope gives you "instantaneous" velocity. The average of the instantaneous gives you average velocity.
Yes it does. Velocity = Displacement / Time. On a graph of displacement vs time, the slope is the velocity. Steeper slope = higher velocity, flatter slope = lower velocity.
False. The slope of a velocity vs time graph is acceleration
the slope at any point on the graph is the acceleration
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents acceleration.
velocity.
The slope of the speed/time graph is the magnitude of acceleration. (It's very difficult to draw a graph of velocity, unless the direction is constant.)
The slope of a line on a position vs. time graph would represent the a velocity of the object being described.
The rate of Change in acceleration.
Tangent of the slope at any point = velocity
Slope of time Vs distance graph gives the inverse of velocity.
instantaneous magnitude of velocity
The rate of change in accelleration.
Magnitude of acceleration (but conveys no informationregarding acceleration's direction).