Answer: See Explanation
Step-by-step explanation:
Did the car travel at a constant speed?
This means "Is the speed at each interval the same?"
There are 10 intervals for which to calculate from.
For each one, the speed is the distance traveled divided by the time.
Each interval is 1 meter long (distance).
1st: 1 meter / 2.00 s = 0.5 m/s
2nd: 1 meter / (4.00 - 2.00) s = 0.5 m/s
3rd: 1 meter / (6.2 - 4.0) s = 0.454 m/s
Right here you can see that the speed is different, NO is the answer.
Average Speed = total distance divided by total time
v = d / t v = (10 m) / (20:00 s) = 0.5 (m/s)
Describe the overall motion: (continue on with step one to see the total motion over the 10 meters)
4th: 0.552
5th: 0.472
6th: 0.5
7th: 0.5
8th: 0.4975
9th: 5.39
10th: 0.55
Overall motion stayed steady from 0-2 meters, slowed for the 3rd meter, sped up for the 4th, slowed down the 5th, stayed steady until slowing down in the 8th meter, then increased speed til the 10th meter.
Races would be practical applications to see where people/cars pace themselves, push themselves, etc.