L_0611 said:
so are you saying that time should equal change in velocity divided by change in distance, not acceleration? but because both my initial velocity and initial distance is 0, I can just use time= velocity/acceleration? I think I'm somewhat starting to understand it, however still very confused.
You should start at what the definitions of the terms are. Velocity is a change in distance over time. Acceleration is change in velocity over time. Time and change in time (t and dt or Δt) for acceleration are interchangeable since you're talking about an interval. Saying it took 5 seconds, or that it took from the 5 second to the 10 second mark are the same thing.
(I am going to NOT leave out the squares for you here. If they are not there, they are not meant to be.)
Acceleration is defined as a = Δv/Δt and in your problem is meters and seconds, so acceleration will be in meters per second per second, which is the same as m/s/s, which is also the same as m/s^2.
Velocity is v2 = v1 + at, in other words, final velocity is equal to starting velocity plus the rate of change of velocity multiplied by how long you were moving. If you look at this in relation to the bit about acceleration, what do you see?
Distance is defined one of two ways. For constant velocity it's simply d = vt. How far you go is your velocity times how long you're moving. For constant acceleration (changing velocity), the formula is d = 1/2(v2-v1)t.
If it's easier for you (and it is for me), what that really is saying is it's average velocity times time. Rearrange the terms and you'll see that 1/2(v2-v1)t is the same as ((v2-v1)/2)t.
Those both solve for distance when you know time and the start and end velocities.
When you know acceleration and velocity but not the distance, you use the formula you initially tried to use: v2² = v1² - 2ad.
If you practice with all of these and make sure that now matter how you do the substitutions, the answers always come out the same. As long as you follow the rules, they always will, because all of these equations are derived from one another.