When the slope of a velocity vs. time graph is not zero, it indicates that the object is accelerating. Positive slope means the object is speeding up, negative slope means it is slowing down.
When the slope of a velocity vs. time graph is zero, it indicates that the object is momentarily at rest. The object is not moving or changing its velocity at that specific point in time.
From a velocity-time graph, you can calculate the acceleration by finding the slope of the graph at a certain point. The area under the graph represents the displacement of the object. You can also determine the direction of motion based on the slope of the graph (positive slope indicates motion in one direction, negative slope indicates motion in the opposite direction).
When the slope of a position vs. time graph is constant, it indicates that the object is moving at a constant velocity. This type of motion is called uniform motion, where the object covers equal distances in equal intervals of time.
The velocity of an object can be determined from a displacement-time graph by calculating the slope of the graph at a specific point. The slope at a given point represents the instantaneous velocity of the object at that point. The steeper the slope, the greater the velocity, with positive slopes indicating motion in one direction and negative slopes indicating motion in the opposite direction.
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.)
It means that the velocity is constant, or not changing.
The slope of a position/time graph is the speed (magnitude of velocity).If the graph's slope is changing, that means the speed is changing, andthat would be accelerated motion.
Assuming the graph is for displacement versus time, the motion should be constant velocity. If velocity versus time motion is constant acceleration
When the slope of a velocity vs. time graph is zero, it indicates that the object is momentarily at rest. The object is not moving or changing its velocity at that specific point in time.
distance = velocity x time so on the graph velocity is slope. If slope is zero (horizontal line) there is no motion
That slope is the 'speed' of the motion. If the slope is changing, then the speed is changing. That's 'accelerated' motion. (It doesn't matter whether the speed is growing or shrinking. It's still 'accelerated' motion. 'Acceleration' does NOT mean 'speeding up'.)
From a velocity-time graph, you can calculate the acceleration by finding the slope of the graph at a certain point. The area under the graph represents the displacement of the object. You can also determine the direction of motion based on the slope of the graph (positive slope indicates motion in one direction, negative slope indicates motion in the opposite direction).
When the slope of a position vs. time graph is constant, it indicates that the object is moving at a constant velocity. This type of motion is called uniform motion, where the object covers equal distances in equal intervals of time.
The velocity of an object can be determined from a displacement-time graph by calculating the slope of the graph at a specific point. The slope at a given point represents the instantaneous velocity of the object at that point. The steeper the slope, the greater the velocity, with positive slopes indicating motion in one direction and negative slopes indicating motion in the opposite direction.
The motion at constant speed.
instantaneous velocity
The slope of a position-time graph represents the velocity of an object. A steeper slope indicates a higher velocity, while a flatter slope indicates a lower velocity. Positive slopes represent motion in one direction, negative slopes represent motion in the opposite direction, and a horizontal line represents an object at rest.