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Distance divided by speed will give you the time it took to travel the distance.
There are several formulae for different cases. For the case of a constant speed, use the formula: distance = speed x time.
You can calculate this using the formula:time = distance / speed
Speed = Distance divided by the time taken to cover that distance.The stopwatch gives the time taken by the vehicle to cover the known distance. Hence he can calculate the speed.
Speed is measured in m/s (meters per second)You can calculate speed using the following formula :Speed = Distance/TimeExamples:distance=100 meters=20s s=d/ts=100m/20ss= 5m/sthe units for speed equal up to m/s units always.so then your speed is 5 m/s
A distance-time graph is created by placing the distance on the vertical axis with the time placed on the horizontal axis. The values can then be plotted using distance traveled on different intervals.
A measured value is one that is directly obtained from the environment, such as using a scale to weight something. To calculate a value is to figure it out using other values. For example, if you know the distance something traveled and the time it took, you can calculate its speed.
i dont know that's why I'm asking
Speed=distance/time. Speed is in meters per second if distance is in meters, and time is in seconds. Using simple algebra, the equation can be rearranged to solve for a missing variable (speed, distance, or time). therefore: distance=speed x time time= distance/speed
By using the parallax you can deduce the distance to all planets and many stars. [See related link]From that, simple math can calculate and distance to light speed.
If you assume that the initial speed is zero, you can calculate the distance using the formula:distance = 1/2 x acceleration x time squared
By using the "doppler" effect and measuring the change in frequency.