the answer is...i have the W.S....lol...it should be the same
On a graph of velocity and time, a constant speed would appear as a straight horizontal line.
I would like to state first that you misspelled horizontal. The answer to your question is Constant speed.
stem-and-leaf plots
The line would indicate motion at a constant speed.
No, because that would imply that the object travelled at infinite speed.
If speed changes, then the speed/time graph has up/down curves in it.
If a body is moving with variable speed, then the only thing you can say aboutits speed/time graph is that the graph is not a straight, horizontal line.
The graph is a straight line whose slope is the acceleration of gravity.
If the Object is falling at a constant velocity the shape of the graph would be linear. If the object is falling at a changing velocity (Accelerating) the shape of the graph would be exponential- "J' Shape.
x and y
-- If the graph displays speed against time, then speed of zero is indicated wherever the graph-line touches the x-axis. -- If the graph displays distance against time, then speed of zero is indicated wherever the graph-line is horizontal. -- If the graph displays acceleration (magnitude) against time, then the graph can tell you when speed is increasing or decreasing, but it doesn't show what the actual speed is.
On a graph of velocity and time, a constant speed would appear as a straight horizontal line.
That would be true, in the case of a graph of speed vs time.
On a V-t graph, constant speed is shown as a horizontal line.
constant speed
Speed = distance / time A line graph with distance on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis could be used to determine speed. The speed would equal the slope of the line. Alternatively, a line graph with distance/time on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis would show speed. The acceleration would equal the slope of the line.
I would like to state first that you misspelled horizontal. The answer to your question is Constant speed.