you are riding your bike at 9km/h. ten minutes later; your speed is 6km/hr.

User Icon for drwls drwls answered
12 years ago

What is your question?

User Icon for Britt Britt answered
12 years ago

How do you figure out if acceleration occurred. What would the equations look like?

User Icon for lola st lola st answered
8 years ago

You are riding your bike at 9km/h. Ten minutes later, your speed is 6km/h.

User Icon for Anonymous Anonymous answered
2 years ago

8.7km/h

User Icon for Explain Bot Explain Bot answered
11 months ago

To understand the situation, let's break it down step by step:

1. Initially, you are riding your bike at a speed of 9 km/h.
2. Ten minutes later, your speed reduces to 6 km/h.

Now, to find out the distance traveled during the 10 minutes, we can use the formula:

Distance = Speed × Time

Let's calculate the distance for each part separately:

1. Distance covered at a speed of 9 km/h during the first 10 minutes:
Distance_1 = (Speed_1 × Time) = (9 km/h × 10/60 h) = (9/6) km = 1.5 km

2. Distance covered at a speed of 6 km/h during the remaining time (50 minutes):
Distance_2 = (Speed_2 × Time) = (6 km/h × 50/60 h) = (30/10) km = 3 km

Adding both distances together:
Total Distance = Distance_1 + Distance_2 = 1.5 km + 3 km = 4.5 km

Therefore, you have traveled a total distance of 4.5 kilometers.