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14 April, 12:11

If it takes you 10 seconds to increase from 0 km/h to 50 km/h, what is your acceleration?

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Answers (2)
  1. 14 April, 12:41
    0
    In order to figure this out you use the equation acceleration = final velocity - initial velocity / time. or a = vf-vi/t. So a = 50 km/h - 0 km/h / 10 seconds. Since 50 - 0 is 50, 50 divided by 10 is 5. So you acceleration is 5 km/h plus the direction you are traveling. So your answer should look like a=5km/h + direction
  2. 14 April, 15:30
    0
    Acceleration is change in velocity over change in time. Your Δv is + 13.9, since you increased speed by 50 km/h which is 13.9 m/s, and your Δt is 10s. 13.9/10 = 1.39 m/s^2, the standard units for acceleration. Make sense?
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