- Speeding up
- Slowing down
- Moving at a constant velocity or at rest
- Changing direction

Category: Physics
- Constant net force
- Constant rate of change of velocity
- Equal distances covered in equal time intervals
- Straight-line velocity-time graph
- Only constant in magnitude
- Only constant in direction
- Constant in both magnitude and direction
- Continuously changing
- Straight line through origin
- Straight line with negative slope
- Parabola opening upwards
- Parabola opening downwards
- Its velocity changes.
- Its speed must always increase.
- It covers unequal distances in equal time intervals (if starting from rest).
- Its acceleration is constant.
- Equal distances in equal time intervals
- Unequal distances in equal time intervals
- Equal distances in equal time intervals only if starting from rest
- Equal distances in equal time intervals only if moving at constant velocity
- Constant net force
- Constant velocity
- Constant displacement
- Constant speed
- Zero acceleration
- Uniform acceleration
- Non-uniform acceleration
- It must have undergone a change in direction with zero acceleration
- Uniform velocity
- Non-uniform acceleration
- Uniform acceleration
- Zero acceleration
- Displacement
- Velocity
- Acceleration
- Distance
- sn?=u+a(n?1/2)
- sn?=u+an
- sn?=u+a(n2)
- sn?=u+2an
- a=(v?u)/t
- a=(u?v)/t
- a=(v+u)/t
- a=d/t
- It implies constant speed.
- It implies constant velocity.
- It can cause a change in the direction of motion.
- It only occurs when speed is increasing.
- Yes, because speed is constant.
- No, because direction of velocity is changing.
- Yes, because magnitude of acceleration is constant.
- No, because acceleration is zero.
- 2 m/s
- 5 m/s
- 10 m/s
- 25 m/s
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