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  1. Part 1 - Speed Calculations: Use the speed formula to calculate the answers to the following questions. Be sure to show your work for each problem (write the formula, numbers with correct units, and the answer with the correct units). 1. Calculate the speed for a car that went a distance of 125 kilometers in 2 hours time. Equation: Plug numbers ...

  2. Speed, Velocity and Acceleration Calculations Worksheet Part 1 - Speed Calculations: Use the speed formula to calculate the answers to the following questions. Be sure to show your work for each problem (write the formula, numbers with correct units, and the answer with the correct units). 1.

  3. Worksheet 7: Velocity and Acceleration. Directions: Select the best answer for each of the following questions. Answers are found at the end of this document.

  4. Acceleration Rule. Acceleration = (Final velocity - Initial velocity) / Time. a = ( v2 – v1 ) / t Earth’s Gravitational Acceleration (g) is the acceleration of an object as it to earth at m/s2 This means that an object that falls starts at 0m/s, and then every second, its speed by 9.8m/s. Questions - Acceleration.

  5. In this section, we look at some convenient equations for kinematic relationships, starting from the definitions of displacement, velocity, and acceleration. We first investigate a single object in motion, called single-body motion. Then we investigate the motion of two objects, called two-body pursuit problems. Notation

  6. Displacement, Velocity, and Acceleration Worksheet. 1. While John is traveling along a straight interstate highway, he notices that the mile marker reads 260. John travels until he reaches the 150-mile marker and then retraces his path to the 175-mile marker. What is John’s displacement from the 260-mile marker? 2.

  7. Using integral calculus, we can work backward and calculate the velocity function from the acceleration function, and the position function from the velocity function. Kinematic Equations from Integral Calculus. Let’s begin with a particle with an acceleration a(t) which is a known function of time. Since the time derivative of the velocity ...