The area under a velocity-time graph represents the displacement of an object. If the area is positive, the object is moving in the positive direction; if negative, the object is moving in the negative direction. The steeper the slope of the graph, the greater the velocity.
A velocity vs. time graph shows how the velocity of an object changes with respect to time. The slope of the graph represents the object's acceleration, while the area under the curve represents the distance traveled by the object. Flat sections of the graph indicate constant velocity, while curved sections show changes in acceleration.
On a graph showing the motion of an object, variables such as time (on the x-axis) and position or displacement (on the y-axis) would be used. The slope of the graph would represent the object's velocity, while the area under the curve would represent the object's displacement.
if the segments on the disp vs time graph are straight lines, you merely measure the slope of those lines; the velocity is the slope of the lineso if the disp vs time graph shows a straight line of slope 3 between say t=0 and t=4, then you know the object had a constant speed of 3 units between t=0 and t=4;if the disp vs time graph is curved, then you need to find the slope of the tangent line to the disp vs time curve at each point; the slope of this tangent line is the instantaneous speed at the time, and with several such measurements you can construct your v vs t graph
The velocity versus time graph of an object receiving an applied net force will show a linear increase or decrease in velocity, depending on the direction of the force.
False. Velocity is the slope of a position vs time graph, not a displacement vs time graph. Displacement vs time graphs show how an object's position changes over time, while velocity represents the rate of change of position.
The area under an acceleration-time graph is equal to the object's velocity (not change in velocity).
The position.
A position time graph can show you velocity. As time changes, so does position, and the velocity of the object can be determined. For a speed time graph, you can derive acceleration. As time changes, so does velocity, and the acceleration of the object can be determined.If you are plotting velocity (speed) versus time, the slope is the acceleration.
A velocity vs. time graph shows how the velocity of an object changes with respect to time. The slope of the graph represents the object's acceleration, while the area under the curve represents the distance traveled by the object. Flat sections of the graph indicate constant velocity, while curved sections show changes in acceleration.
you can't....it's merely impossible! Assuming it is a graph of velocity vs time, it's not impossible, it's simple. Average velocity is total distance divided by total time. The total time is the difference between finish and start times, and the distance is the area under the graph between the graph and the time axis.
On a graph showing the motion of an object, variables such as time (on the x-axis) and position or displacement (on the y-axis) would be used. The slope of the graph would represent the object's velocity, while the area under the curve would represent the object's displacement.
Position-Time GraphYou can graph motion on a position vs time graph. On a position vs time graph, position is on the y-axis and time is on the x-axis. If the velocity is constant, the graph will be a straight line and the slope is average velocity. If the motion is accelerating, the graph will be a curved line.Velocity-Time GraphYou can also graph motion on a Velocity-Time graph. On a velocity vs time graph, velocity is on the y-axis, time is on the x-axis. If the graph is a straight line, velocity is constant and the slope is average acceleration. Also, on a velocity vs time graph, the area under the line is displacement.Refer to the related link for illustrations of the different graphs of motion and their meanings.
as a horizontal straight line
if the segments on the disp vs time graph are straight lines, you merely measure the slope of those lines; the velocity is the slope of the lineso if the disp vs time graph shows a straight line of slope 3 between say t=0 and t=4, then you know the object had a constant speed of 3 units between t=0 and t=4;if the disp vs time graph is curved, then you need to find the slope of the tangent line to the disp vs time curve at each point; the slope of this tangent line is the instantaneous speed at the time, and with several such measurements you can construct your v vs t graph
the slope show the velocity of the object which show its direction and magnitude.
The velocity versus time graph of an object receiving an applied net force will show a linear increase or decrease in velocity, depending on the direction of the force.
False. Velocity is the slope of a position vs time graph, not a displacement vs time graph. Displacement vs time graphs show how an object's position changes over time, while velocity represents the rate of change of position.