Physics, asked by JeniXaLispan, 8 months ago

difference between velocity and average velocity​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

The definition used for average velocity in physics is change in position divided by change in time.  This provides a simple and objective way to deal with all of the changes in speed and direction an object might have gone through in that time interval in order to average them out.

By velocity I assume you mean the velocity at one instant of time.  This can, and for real objects, usually does change continuously over time.  This "instantaneous velocity"  is useful if you want to know the effects of a collision.  Only the last instantaneous velocity matters for this.  It is also useful in describing and determining how velocity is changing.  When velocity versus time graphs are produced, the velocities graphed are assumed to be instantaneous velocities.

Answered by DeepRex
0

Answer:

Rate of change of displacement is called velocity V=x/t

Average velocity is the ratio of Total Displacement travelled by total time taken Average vel=TDT/TTT

Explanation:

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