Calculates acceleration as (final speed − initial speed) ÷ time. Speeds are in m/s, time in seconds, and acceleration in m/s². Slowing down gives a negative value.
Acceleration is how much the speed changes each second. Give the starting speed, the final speed and the time taken, and it follows.
The calculator reports the change in speed, , alongside the acceleration.
The defaults are an initial speed of 10 m/s, a final speed of 30 m/s and a time of 4 s.
The acceleration is 5 m/s² and the change in speed is 20 m/s. In other words, the object gained 5 m/s of speed every second.
This is the average acceleration across those 4 seconds. If the object sped up unevenly, the average will not reveal it.
Slowing down gives a negative acceleration. Dropping from 30 m/s to 10 m/s in 4 s comes out as −5 m/s². A negative answer is not a mistake.
The time must be greater than zero. Zero or a negative value gives an error.
Speeds go in m/s. Divide km/h by 3.6 to convert: 72 km/h is 20 m/s.