Speed vs Acceleration: What's the Difference?

AI Thread Summary
Speed is a scalar quantity that indicates how fast an object is moving, while acceleration is a vector quantity representing the rate of change of velocity. Velocity, also a vector, describes the speed of an object in a specific direction. When a car accelerates, its speed increases if acceleration and velocity are aligned; however, braking is also a form of acceleration that decreases speed. Understanding these distinctions clarifies how speed, acceleration, and velocity interact in motion.
MoMo
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
:cry: Could someone please explain what the difference is between speed and acceleration? I would sincerely appreciate it, thanks!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
What are their definitions?
 
speed - a scalar quantity, which refers to how fast an object is moving

acceleration - a vector quantity, which is defined as the rate of change of velocity

...erm let me add velocity's def here as well:

velocity - a vector quantity, which refers to the rate at which an object changes its position and is computed from the displacement/time ratio

See, what confuses me is when I compare speed and acceleration in terms of a car. When a car accelerates, doesn't its speed increase? What does velocity have to do with these two terms as well? Btw thanks again :-)
 
MoMo said:
See, what confuses me is when I compare speed and acceleration in terms of a car. When a car accelerates, doesn't its speed increase?
Acceleration is the rate of change of the velocity. So as long as acceleration and velocity are in the same direction, acceleration will result in increased velocity.

Don't forget that when you hit the brakes, the car also accelerates--just in the opposite direction to the velocity vector (or at least you hope it does).

MoMo said:
What does velocity have to do with these two terms as well?
Velocity is the speed of the car and its direction.
 
Last edited:
That makes sense. Thank you :-)
 
MoMo said:
That makes sense. Thank you :-)
My pleasure.
 
Hi there, im studying nanoscience at the university in Basel. Today I looked at the topic of intertial and non-inertial reference frames and the existence of fictitious forces. I understand that you call forces real in physics if they appear in interplay. Meaning that a force is real when there is the "actio" partner to the "reactio" partner. If this condition is not satisfied the force is not real. I also understand that if you specifically look at non-inertial reference frames you can...
I have recently been really interested in the derivation of Hamiltons Principle. On my research I found that with the term ##m \cdot \frac{d}{dt} (\frac{dr}{dt} \cdot \delta r) = 0## (1) one may derivate ##\delta \int (T - V) dt = 0## (2). The derivation itself I understood quiet good, but what I don't understand is where the equation (1) came from, because in my research it was just given and not derived from anywhere. Does anybody know where (1) comes from or why from it the...
Back
Top