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Has this equation been made before?


Time is realated to distance,
If X. and Y, have different distances, X being long, Y, being short, to reach their destinations at the same time x must travel faster then then Y.
So if Yis a shorter distant then X,
Then X has to have faster movement to = the same amount of time that passes for Y.

Yreaches it destitation at a slower amount of speed. Yet at the same amount to time.

Short distance and long distance= same amount of time that passes.
Long distance must = more then speed then
short distance.
Lond ditance= Ld =x
Short distanace= Sd= Y
Speed=s
Same amount of time= sat
>greater then, < less then

x>s=sat =y
Example equation.
Distance X=7miles
Distance Y=4miles
Sat = 5mins
S=speed, varible.
7>s=5mins=4>s

Should I revise this some how?

2006-10-02 08:54:45 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

DUH!!!!!!!!!!!!
7>s=5mins=4

2006-10-02 09:04:34 · update #1

4 answers

No. First, Nothing you said makes any sense whatsoever. Second, even though it's not valid and doesn't make sense, I would like to point out that it's an inequality, not an equation. Third, no you should NOT revise it.

2006-10-02 09:13:41 · answer #1 · answered by عبد الله (ドラゴン) 5 · 1 0

you have to consider the entire equation V=s/t together. You can not say "Then X has to have faster movement to = the same amount of time that passes for Y." whith out considering the distance. Work on your equation.

2006-10-02 09:32:01 · answer #2 · answered by piti 2 · 1 0

wow. way to go, newton.

2006-10-02 09:24:03 · answer #3 · answered by theliberaloneforyou 1 · 0 0

haha what! How old are you??

2006-10-02 09:24:34 · answer #4 · answered by msol800 2 · 0 0

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