Ask Question
19 December, 19:15

A student walks 30 feet to the right. Then walks 10 feet to the left. Then walks 20 feet to the right. It took 20 seconds to do all of this. What was the students velocity? (use ft/s and direction as unit)

+4
Answers (2)
  1. 19 December, 20:33
    0
    The student's displacement (straight-line distance between initial and final positions) is 40-ft right.

    Velocity = displacement / time

    Velocity = 40-ft right / 20 sec

    Velocity = 2 ft/sec right.
  2. 19 December, 21:11
    0
    The students velocity is 3 ft/s

    Explanation:

    Velocity (ft/s)

    Velocity is the Total distance covered over time taken to cover the distance. D/t

    Overall movement to the right is the distance covered.

    Total distance covered = 30 ft - 10 ft + 20 ft

    = 40 ft

    Time taken = 20 s

    Students velocity = 40 ft / 20 s

    Students velocity = 2 ft/s
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “A student walks 30 feet to the right. Then walks 10 feet to the left. Then walks 20 feet to the right. It took 20 seconds to do all of ...” in 📙 Physics if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers