Physics, asked by vrajeswari9100, 6 months ago

When the velocity is constant, can the average velocity over any time interval differ
from instantaneous velocity at any instant? If so, give an example; if not explain why.

Answers

Answered by ManswiPradhan
0

Answer:

please mark as brainliest answer.

Explanation:

If the velocity is constant, then both the average velocity over any time interval is the same as instantaneous velocity at any instant. It is because, it covers equal displacement at equal time interval

Answered by sparklequeen62
2

Answer:

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. ... Velocity is the rate at which the position changes. The average velocity is the displacement or position change (a vector quantity) per time ratio.

Similar questions