None! The ball is DE-ccelerating as it rises, stops for an infinitesimal time at peak, then accelerates back down.
HELLO
To find the acceleration of an object moving in a straight line, you must calculate the change in velocity during a unit of time. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity over time, not distance. It is given by the formula acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time.
time
The simple and straight forward answer to this is..."Blindness". This is not because of solar eclipse, but because of watching the solar eclipse directly without protections.
The acceleration of the body was zero during this interval because its velocity was constant. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so if the velocity does not change, the acceleration is zero.
Average acceleration will be equal to instantaneous acceleration when an object has an uniform acceleration throughout its motion. Example : A car accelerating at 1m/s2 uniformly in a straight line.
During acceleration? I'm not sure. But when both idling and acceleration the engine's combustion can cause a lot of vibration in the steering wheel if you are in an older vehicle.
The shift of velocity per unit of given time is called acceleration. The types of acceleration are negative acceleration and positive acceleration.
Uniform motion is when an object travels in a straight line at a constant speed. This means that the object covers equal distances in equal intervals of time. There is no change in direction or acceleration during uniform motion.
No, it's only the acceleration. By (-)ve acceleration ,it means retardation or deceleration..
Actually, an increase in speed during a given interval of time is called acceleration, not negative acceleration. Negative acceleration, also known as deceleration, refers to a decrease in speed over time.
Dividing change of velocity by the time it takes to change the velocity. If acceleration is not constant, this will give you the average acceleration during the period; to get the instantaneous acceleration, you have to take the derivative of the velocity.