Physics, asked by BLACK1817, 5 months ago

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Answers

Answered by MishraVidya1205
11

Answer:

The velocity of an object A relative to another object B is the velocity that object A would appear to have to an observer moving with B. One obvious example of this is to work out how long it will take two objects travelling along a line at different velocities to collide – like cars on a road.

Explanation:

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Answered by paridi83
6

Answer:

The relative velocity (also or. ) is the velocity of an object or observer B in the rest frame of another object or observer A.

Explanation:

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