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  2. The kinematic equations (article) | Khan Academy

    Learn what the kinematic equations are and how you can use them to analyze scenarios involving constant acceleration.

  3. Acceleration (video) | Motion | Khan Academy

    Acceleration (a) is the change in velocity (Δv) over the change in time (Δt), represented by the equation a = Δv/Δt. This allows you to measure how fast velocity changes in meters per …

  4. What is acceleration? (article) | Khan Academy

    What's the formula for acceleration? To be specific, acceleration is defined to be the rate of change of the velocity.

  5. Deriving displacement as a function of time, acceleration, and …

    Acceleration is defined as the rate of change of velocity. a = Δv/Δt or written another way vf = a*t + vi Both those equations are equivalent.

  6. Acceleration: At a glance (article) | Khan Academy

    We can describe acceleration as the change in velocity over time, and we can use the shorthand equation a = Δ v / Δ t to represent this relationship where ‘a’ is the average acceleration, ‘v’ is …

  7. Average velocity for constant acceleration - Khan Academy

    Investigate the relationships between velocity, acceleration, and distance in a physics context. Learn how to use formulas to calculate final velocity and total distance traveled given an initial …

  8. Review of 1D motion (video) | Khan Academy

    The formula for acceleration is the change in velocity over the time it took for that velocity to change. Since delta means final minus initial, you could write this as the final velocity minus …

  9. Deriving formula for centripetal acceleration from angular velocity

    If I have it R squared over R, well, that's just going to simplify to an R, so there we have it, we have our formula for the magnitude of our centripetal acceleration in terms of the magnitude of …

  10. Newton's second law review (article) | Khan Academy

    Newton’s second law says that the acceleration and net external force are directly proportional, and there is an inversely proportional relationship between acceleration and mass.