The Slope (which represents acceleration) of a constant velocity graph is Zero.
constant slope. really anything will work as long as it stays the same. so if your line is straight then you have a constant velocity. :)
If velocity is constant, the slope of the graph on a position vs. time graph will be a straight line. The slope of this line will represent the constant velocity of the object.
A constant acceleration on a velocity-time graph would appear as a straight line with a non-zero slope. The slope of the line represents the acceleration, with a steeper slope indicating a greater acceleration.
No, a negative slope on a velocity vs time graph indicates that the object is moving in the negative direction. If the slope is constant, it means the object is moving at a constant speed in the negative direction.
A graph of uniform velocity would be a straight line with a constant slope, indicating that the object is moving at a constant speed in a straight line without changing its velocity.
constant slope. really anything will work as long as it stays the same. so if your line is straight then you have a constant velocity. :)
The slope of a time-distance chart would be a constant. The slope of a time-velocity chart would be 0.
If velocity is constant, the slope of the graph on a position vs. time graph will be a straight line. The slope of this line will represent the constant velocity of the object.
A displacement vs. time graph of a body moving with uniform (constant) velocity will always be a line of which the slope will be the value of velocity. This is true because velocity is the derivative (or slope at any time t) of the displacement graph, and if the slope is always constant, then the displacement will change at a constant rate.
A changing slope on a velocity-time graph indicates that the object's acceleration is changing. If the slope is increasing, the acceleration is positive, and if the slope is decreasing, the acceleration is negative. A flat slope indicates constant velocity.
A constant acceleration on a velocity-time graph would appear as a straight line with a non-zero slope. The slope of the line represents the acceleration, with a steeper slope indicating a greater acceleration.
A straight line with a constant slope. But the reverse is not true. A straight line with a constant slope only means constant speed in the radial direction. The velocity may have components at right angles to the radial direction that are changing.
No, a negative slope on a velocity vs time graph indicates that the object is moving in the negative direction. If the slope is constant, it means the object is moving at a constant speed in the negative direction.
Ahorizontal line on a velocity vs time graph does not indicate any acceleration because there is no slope. Speed remains constant.
It means that the velocity is constant, or not changing.
A graph of uniform velocity would be a straight line with a constant slope, indicating that the object is moving at a constant speed in a straight line without changing its velocity.
The slope of a velocity-time graph represents the acceleration of an object. A steeper slope indicates a higher acceleration, while a shallower slope represents a lower acceleration. A flat slope (zero slope) indicates constant velocity.