v(t) = ds
dt This should be the formula for instantaneous velocity.
There are, of course, several formulae that involve acceleration. The basic definition of acceleration is: acceleration = delta velocity / delta time, that is, to get average acceleration, divide the difference of velocity by the time that passed. The same formula also gives you the instant acceleration, if the acceleration is constant. If you want to get instantaneous acceleration, and the acceleration changes, then you need calculus: acceleration = dv / dt (that is, take the derivative of the velocity).
Yes, instantaneous velocity is a vector quantity because it has both magnitude (speed) and direction. It describes how fast and in which direction an object is moving at a specific moment in time.
Instantaneous velocity:Suppose the velocity of the car is varying, because for example, you're in a traffic jam. You look at the speedometer and it's varying a lot, all the way from zero to 60 mph. What is the instantaneous velocity? It is, more or less, what you read on the speedometer. I'm assuming you've got a good speedometer that isn't too sluggish and can change its reading quite quickly. Your speedometer is measuring the the average velocity but one measured over quite a short time, to ensure that you're getting an up to date reading of your velocity.So if you measure the displacement of the car over a time , you can use that to determine the average velocity of the car. What we want is to take the limit as goes to zero.Most of the time we'll be working with instantaneous velocity, so we'll just drop the instantaneous, and call the above vthe velocity.To justify that such a limit exists is something that you've hopefully had to grapple with already. For physics problems, this limit does indeed exist and gives the derivative
Yes. It depends on the formula and what you want the formula to do. So it is easy to have the wrong formula and paste it, or have the correct formula initially, but when it is pasted elsewhere it does not use the correct values. Normally if you have your worksheet set up correctly then once the initial formula is correct, pasting it to the right place should not cause any problems.
The correct formula for nitrogen tribromide is NBr3.
Did you want the formula? If so it is MgO.
There are several, what is it that you want to calculate? The "natural" units for angular velocity are radians/second. The relationship between linear velocity and angular velocity is especially simple in this case: linear velocity (at the edge) = angular velocity x radius.
Velocity is typically defined as the rate of change of position with respect to time. Mathematically, it can be expressed as v = Δx / Δt, where v is velocity, Δx is the change in position, and Δt is the change in time. Velocity can also be represented as the derivative of position with respect to time: v = dx/dt.
If the word Yes is in E8, the following formula will put Correct in the cell that the formula is in, or else leave it blank, which is done by have a two sets of double quotes with no gap between them after the final comma. =IF(E8="Yes","Correct","") You can exchange the Yes with whatever you are testing for and the Correct with whatever you want to put in the cell. Another thing you can do is use the IsBlank function to test if the cell is empty. If it is empty it will leave the cell with the formula blank or will put the word Correct in, no matter what is in the cell E8 if it is not blank. That may not be exactly what you want to do, but this would be the formula. =IF(IsBlank(E8),"","Correct") If you want to allow numbers to be in the cell, but no text you could use the IsText function: =IF(Not(IsText(E8)),"","Correct") Probably the first formula or a slight variation of it is what you are looking for.
The first answer is backward. Acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity)/total time. For deceleration the formula is the same, the answer will just be negative.Agreed. In physics, there is no "deceleration", only negative acceleration.a = Δv / ΔtThere is no equation for "deceleration" as suggested below.Deceleration=(original velocity-final velocity)/TimeDeceleration In MotionDeceleration = inital speed - final speed / total time taken
The 100%correct answer is as close as possible , because you don’t want to run around the building to close the tab .
Range finder. Double clicking on the formula activates the range finder and you can see what cells are in the formula. This can help you see if the correct cells are in the formula.