It is proportional if the velocity doesn't change over time.
constant speed.
Constant speed. (Acceleration isn't necessarily zero, and velocity isn't necessarily constant.)
If the distance of travel remains constant in every case, then the time required to cover the distance is inversely proportional to the speed of the particle. T = (constant) divided by (speed) or: (Time) x (Speed) = A constant, if the distance under consideration doesn't change. Note: This expression is a good approximation at everyday speeds. It becomes less accurate at speeds where relativistic effects become significant.
Distance is directly proportional to time when speed is constant, meaning that the farther you travel, the longer it takes. Conversely, distance is inversely proportional to time when speed varies, such that if you increase speed, you decrease the time it takes to travel a certain distance.
There are two pieces of data that need to be recorded. The distance and the time it takes to complete the known distance, gives you the speed. For an example, your car travels at a steady 60 miles, in one hour you would expect to have travelled 60 miles.
Not sure what you mean exactly. At constant velocity, the distance travelled is proportional to the time.
constant speed.
Constant speed. (Acceleration isn't necessarily zero, and velocity isn't necessarily constant.)
The average speed of a particle is the total distance traveled divided by the total time taken. This gives you a measure of the overall speed of the particle throughout its journey.
If the distance of travel remains constant in every case, then the time required to cover the distance is inversely proportional to the speed of the particle. T = (constant) divided by (speed) or: (Time) x (Speed) = A constant, if the distance under consideration doesn't change. Note: This expression is a good approximation at everyday speeds. It becomes less accurate at speeds where relativistic effects become significant.
The distance travelled divided by time. Distance/time = speed
Distance is directly proportional to time.(Which simply means that distance covered by object is directly proportional to time it took) Distance= Time*Speed * is the multiplication sign
Distance and time do not, in general, affect the speed. Speed, however, can affect distance or time. Distance is directly proportional to speed, time is inversely proportional.
Velocity = Distance / Time Velocity is defined as the change in Distance travelled over the Time taken to travel across it at this average rate of velocity. Therefore, average velocity and time are inversly proportional to one another, while distance is directly proportional to both time and velocity, and vice versa. At a fixed velocity, the travel time increases as the distance becomes longer; if the distance is fixed, then the velocity must become greater to make the time shorter.
Distance is directly proportional to time when speed is constant, meaning that the farther you travel, the longer it takes. Conversely, distance is inversely proportional to time when speed varies, such that if you increase speed, you decrease the time it takes to travel a certain distance.
It is the average speed.
velocity = distance travelled/time taken to travel that distance