Increasing velocity means that the body is accelerating and a force is acting on the body to produce the acceleration. Uniform velocity means that there is no acceleration or deceleration and so no force acts on the body. (Note that in practice we cannot achieve perpetual motion because of either the decelerating force of gravity or friction).
I assume you mean "non-uniform". "Uniform" simply means that the velocity (in this case) doesn't change.
Uniform velocity is constant speed in a straight line, while variable velocity changes in speed or direction over time. Uniform velocity has no acceleration, whereas variable velocity may have acceleration due to changes in speed or direction.
Uniform velocity means that an object is moving in a straight line at a constant speed, while constant velocity adds the additional condition of moving with a constant speed and direction. In other words, constant velocity implies both uniform speed and no change in direction.
An object moving along a straight line with increasing velocity in a uniform manner is an example of uniform motion with changing velocity at a uniform rate. This could occur if a car accelerates at a constant rate along a straight road.
A body moving at a uniform speed may have a uniform velocity, or its velocity could be changing. How could that be? Let's look. The difference between speed and velocity is that velocity is speed.
I assume you mean "non-uniform". "Uniform" simply means that the velocity (in this case) doesn't change.
Uniform velocity is constant speed in a straight line, while variable velocity changes in speed or direction over time. Uniform velocity has no acceleration, whereas variable velocity may have acceleration due to changes in speed or direction.
Uniform velocity means that an object is moving in a straight line at a constant speed, while constant velocity adds the additional condition of moving with a constant speed and direction. In other words, constant velocity implies both uniform speed and no change in direction.
An object moving along a straight line with increasing velocity in a uniform manner is an example of uniform motion with changing velocity at a uniform rate. This could occur if a car accelerates at a constant rate along a straight road.
A body moving at a uniform speed may have a uniform velocity, or its velocity could be changing. How could that be? Let's look. The difference between speed and velocity is that velocity is speed.
Uniform motion: velocity doesn't change. Periodic motion: velocity changes all the time in a uniform, repeated way. This is most often seen inorbitring and the like, when the change of velocity is a change in direction (and also speed) and the object eventually returns to (roughly) the same place in space.
A body moving at a uniform speed may have a uniform velocity, or its velocity could be changing. How could that be? Let's look. The difference between speed and velocity is that velocity is speed with a direction vector associated with it. If a car is going from, say, Cheyenne, Wyoming to the Nebraska state line at a steady speed of 70 miles per hour, its velocity is 70 miles per hour east. Simple and easy. Uniform speed equals uniform velocity. (Yes, I-80 isn't perfectly straight there. Let's not split hairs.) But a car moving around a circular track at a uniform speed is constantly changing direction. Its speed is constant, but its velocity is changing every moment because the directionit is going is changing. Speed is uniform, but velocity isn't. As asked, uniform speed is a uniform distance per unit of time. And this will yield a uniform distance per unit of time in its velocity, but the direction vector may be uniform or it may be changing each moment, as illustrated.
Uniform flow occurs when the fluid velocity and properties are constant throughout the flow field, while non-uniform flow has varying velocity and properties across the flow field. In uniform flow, streamlines are parallel and the flow is steady, whereas in non-uniform flow, streamlines may converge or diverge and the flow can be unsteady.
zero because the initial and final velocity is constant . so,difference bet. final velocity and initial velocity is zero
A motion with a constant speed will always be moving the same speed A motion with a constant acceleration will constantly be gaining speed, and does not remain moving at the same speed.
Uniform motion is when an object moves with a constant speed in a straight line. Uniform acceleration is when an object's velocity changes at a constant rate. In uniform acceleration, the speed of the object increases or decreases by the same amount over equal time intervals.
The body will possess non uniform velocity when its speed is changing over time, either increasing or decreasing. This can happen when the body is accelerating or decelerating, causing its velocity to be different at different points during its motion.