The slope of [distance vs. time] is [speed]. If the slope is constant, then the speed is constant,
meaning the magnitude of acceleration is zero.
(The direction of velocity might still be changing though, which wouldn't show up on the graph.)
A motion described as a changing, positive velocity results in a sloped line when plotted as a velocity-time graph.
If the acceleration is zero, then the slope is zero (i.e., a horizontal line).
If the acceleration is positive, then the slope is positive (i.e., an upward sloping line).
If the acceleration is negative, then the slope is negative (i.e., a downward sloping line).
The slope of the distance/time graph is the speed of motion. When the slope is zero,
the distance is the same value at every time. Together, they indicate that the speed
is zero, and the object is sitting in the same place as time goes on.
It means that the velocity is constant, or not changing.
For this graph, relative to the point of reference from which the measurements were taken, there is no movement.
The slope of a velocity-time graph is zero over any part of the time when the
velocity is constant (not changing), no matter what number that may be.
If the slope is not zero, that means that the velocity changes,
so there is non-zero acceleration.
The body is under uniform motion.
The motion at constant speed.
no motion
the object is not moving
No, it is a straight line passing through the origin.
Assuming position is on the y axis and time is on the x axis, a positive slope means the position has increased over time.
The one that's perfectly vertical (parallel to the y-axis).
Assuming the graph is for displacement versus time, the motion should be constant velocity. If velocity versus time motion is constant acceleration
The position versus time graph is parabolic.
When there is no acceleration or when there is constant acceleration. When either of these cases is present, the graph of velocity versus time will be linear. When there is linear velocity, the average velocity will equal the instantaneous velocity at any point on the graph.
A straight slanted slope on a velocity-time graph indicates that the object is moving with a constant acceleration.
vt-v2
Speed-Versus-Time Graph and Distance-Versus-Time graph are the two types of graphs that can be used to analyze the motion of an accelerating object.
I'd the line Is straight, speed is constant. If it is bent in anyway, It is non constant
A straight line.
no motion
If a position versus time graph is parabolic, then:Speed versus time is a straight line.Acceleration (magnitude) vs time is a horizontal line, so the acceleration is constant.The graph of height/time for a stone or a baseballtossed upward is an inverted parabola.
the object is not moving
The slope of the curve.