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How can you use a graph to show acceleration? - Answers

With great difficulty. Acceleration is a vector and that means that it has a direction as well as a magnitude (size). For motion in a plane, the only effective way to show acceleration is to draw lots of arrows from points at regular intervals in a plane such that the length of the arrow is a measure of the magnitude of the acceleration and the direction of the arrow coincides with that of the acceleration. An answer referring to a speed-time graph is totally incorrect. That measures speed in the radial direction only. All apects of motion (displacement, speed, acceleration) in a transsverse direction are completely ignored.



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How can you use a graph to show acceleration? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_can_you_use_a_graph_to_show_acceleration

With great difficulty. Acceleration is a vector and that means that it has a direction as well as a magnitude (size). For motion in a plane, the only effective way to show acceleration is to draw lots of arrows from points at regular intervals in a plane such that the length of the arrow is a measure of the magnitude of the acceleration and the direction of the arrow coincides with that of the acceleration. An answer referring to a speed-time graph is totally incorrect. That measures speed in the radial direction only. All apects of motion (displacement, speed, acceleration) in a transsverse direction are completely ignored.



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_can_you_use_a_graph_to_show_acceleration

How can you use a graph to show acceleration? - Answers

With great difficulty. Acceleration is a vector and that means that it has a direction as well as a magnitude (size). For motion in a plane, the only effective way to show acceleration is to draw lots of arrows from points at regular intervals in a plane such that the length of the arrow is a measure of the magnitude of the acceleration and the direction of the arrow coincides with that of the acceleration. An answer referring to a speed-time graph is totally incorrect. That measures speed in the radial direction only. All apects of motion (displacement, speed, acceleration) in a transsverse direction are completely ignored.

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      With great difficulty. Acceleration is a vector and that means that it has a direction as well as a magnitude (size). For motion in a plane, the only effective way to show acceleration is to draw lots of arrows from points at regular intervals in a plane such that the length of the arrow is a measure of the magnitude of the acceleration and the direction of the arrow coincides with that of the acceleration. An answer referring to a speed-time graph is totally incorrect. That measures speed in the radial direction only. All apects of motion (displacement, speed, acceleration) in a transsverse direction are completely ignored.
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