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  1. 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.

  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 second squared …

  4. 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 …

  5. Uniform circular motion and centripetal acceleration review

    Review the key concepts, equations, and skills for uniform circular motion, including centripetal acceleration and the difference between linear and angular velocity.

  6. Deriving displacement as a function of time, acceleration, and initial ...

    Displacement in physics is a vector quantity that measures the change in position of an object over a given time period. Learn how to calculate an object’s displacement as a function of time, constant …

  7. Acceleration review (article) | Acceleration | Khan Academy

    Review the key concepts, equations, and common misconceptions related to acceleration.

  8. Acceleration questions (practice) | Khan Academy

    Acceleration questionsUh oh, it looks like we ran into an error. You need to refresh. If this problem persists, tell us. [Error code: Internal]

  9. Motion with constant acceleration review (article) | Khan Academy

    Review the key concepts, equations, and skills for motion with constant acceleration, including how to choose the best kinematic formula for a problem.

  10. Connecting motion and forces (article) | Khan Academy

    Newton's second law tells us how an object's acceleration depends on its mass and the strength of the net force exerted on it. It can be expressed as an equation: