distinguish between speed and velocity (any four)
Answers
Speed, being a scalar quantity, is the rate at which an object covers distance. The average speed is the distance (a scalar quantity) per time ratio. ... On the other hand, velocity is a vector quantity; it is direction-aware. Velocity is the rate at which the position changes.
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Answer:
Sl. No. Differentiating Property Velocity Speed
1) Definition
Velocity -Velocity can be defined as the rate at which an object changes position in a certain direction.
Speed -The rate at which an object covers a certain distance is known as speed.
2) Type of quantity
Velocity-Vector quantity
Speed - Scalar quantity
3) Magnitude
Velocity -Velocity can be zero, negative, or positive.
Speed -Speed can never be negative or zero.
4) Change of direction
Velocity -The velocity of the object changes with the change in direction, therefore the object must follow one direction.
Speed -The average speed will continue to count even if the object changes direction.
5) Interrelation
An object may possess different velocities but the same speed.
Speed may or may not be equal to velocity.
6) Unit (SI)
Velocity is measured in m/s
Speed is measured in m/s
7) Equation
Velocity = ∆x/∆t; where is the average velocity, ‘∆t’ is the time of arrival and ‘∆x’ is the displacement.
Speed = v = d/t; where ‘v’ is the average speed, ‘t’ is time taken to travel the distance and ‘d’ is the distance travelled.
8) Example
A train going towards the south direction with an average speed of 50 km/h will have a velocity of 50 km/h, north. An object going straight in a particular direction is considered to have velocity.
A sports bike travelling at 50 m/s would go from 0 m/s to 30 m/s, before reaching 50 m/s and could even reach 70 m/s. However, the average speed will be the speed of the bike.