Physics, asked by TheMajestic, 11 months ago

formula of displacement​

Answers

Answered by abhi200144
5

Answer:

This equation relates displacement, original velocity, constant acceleration, and time:

It reads:

Displacement equals the original velocity multiplied by time plus one half the acceleration multiplied by the square of time.

Here is a sample problem and its solution showing the use of this equation:

An object is moving with a velocity of 5.0 m/s. It accelerates constantly at 2.0 m/s/s, (2 m/s2), for a time period of 3.0 s. What is its displacement during this acceleration?

d = vot + (1/2)at2 Start here.

d = (5.0 m/s)(3.0 s) + (1/2)(2.0 m/s/s)(3.0 s)2 Plug in values with units.

d = 15 + 9 Do some intermediate mathematics.

d = 24 m Come up with a final answer.

So, this object moved 24 meters during the 3.0 seconds of the acceleration.

Explanation:

i gave with a example also

hope it helps you lot

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Attachments:
Answered by jeevansuresh
1

Answer: s=ut+1/2*at

Explanation:

s= displacement

u= initial velocity

a= accelaration

t= time taken

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