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A car travels 15 kilometers west in 10 minutes. After reaching the destination, the car travels back to the starting point, again taking 5 minutes. What is the average velocity of the car?

A. 0 meters/second
B. 1.0 meters/second
C. 1.5 meters/second
D. 2.0 meters/second
(HELP ME PLEASE)

User MikeGM
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Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

Speed = (distance traveled) / (time to travel the distance).

Strange as it may seem, 'velocity' is completely different.

Velocity doesn't involve the total distance traveled at all.

Instead, 'velocity' is based on 'displacement' ... the distance

between the start-point and end-point, regardless of the route

taken to get there. So the displacement in driving once around

any closed path is zero, because you end up where you started.

Velocity =

(displacement during some time)

divided by

(time for the displacement)

AND the direction from the start-point to the end-point.

For the guy who drove 15 km to his destination in 10 min, and then

back to his starting point in 5 min, (assuming he returned by way of

the same 15-km route):

Speed = (15km + 15km) / (10min + 5min) = (30/15) (km/min)

= 2 km/min.

Velocity = (end location - start position) / (15 min) = Zero .

User Dmytro Zhytomyrsky
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