Accelerate - Definition. Was ist Accelerate
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Was (wer) ist Accelerate - definition

RATE AT WHICH THE MAGNITUDE AND/OR DIRECTION OF VELOCITY CHANGES WITH TIME
Accelerate; Centripetal acceleration; Deceleration; Accelerative; Accelerating; Accelerations; Centripetal Acceleration; Accelleration; Uniform acceleration; Constant acceleration; Tangental acceleration; Accelerated motion; Accelerated Motion; Radial acceleration; Tangential acceleration; Second temporal derivative of displacement; Uniform Acceleration; Linear acceleration; Exceleration; Decelerating; Constant acceleration formulae; Instantaneous acceleration; Aceleration; Acceleration (physics)
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  • An oscillating pendulum, with velocity and acceleration marked. It experiences both tangential and centripetal acceleration.
  • Calculation of the speed difference for a uniform acceleration

accelerate         
(accelerates, accelerating, accelerated)
1.
If the process or rate of something accelerates or if something accelerates it, it gets faster and faster.
Growth will accelerate to 2.9 per cent next year...
The government is to accelerate its privatisation programme.
VERB: V, V n
2.
When a moving vehicle accelerates, it goes faster and faster.
Suddenly the car accelerated...
She accelerated away from the kerb.
VERB: V, V prep/adv
accelerate         
v. a.
Hasten, expedite, hurry, quicken, speed, precipitate, despatch, urge forward, push forward, push on, press on, urge on.
accelerate         
[?k's?l?re?t]
¦ verb begin to move more quickly.
?increase in rate, amount, or extent.
?Physics undergo a change in velocity.
Derivatives
acceleration noun
accelerative adjective
Origin
C16 (earlier (C15) as acceleration): from L. accelerat-, accelerare 'hasten', from ad- 'towards' + celer 'swift'.

Wikipedia

Acceleration

In mechanics, acceleration is the rate of change of the velocity of an object with respect to time. Accelerations are vector quantities (in that they have magnitude and direction). The orientation of an object's acceleration is given by the orientation of the net force acting on that object. The magnitude of an object's acceleration, as described by Newton's Second Law, is the combined effect of two causes:

  • the net balance of all external forces acting onto that object — magnitude is directly proportional to this net resulting force;
  • that object's mass, depending on the materials out of which it is made — magnitude is inversely proportional to the object's mass.

The SI unit for acceleration is metre per second squared (m⋅s−2, m s 2 {\displaystyle \mathrm {\tfrac {m}{s^{2}}} } ).

For example, when a vehicle starts from a standstill (zero velocity, in an inertial frame of reference) and travels in a straight line at increasing speeds, it is accelerating in the direction of travel. If the vehicle turns, an acceleration occurs toward the new direction and changes its motion vector. The acceleration of the vehicle in its current direction of motion is called a linear (or tangential during circular motions) acceleration, the reaction to which the passengers on board experience as a force pushing them back into their seats. When changing direction, the effecting acceleration is called radial (or centripetal during circular motions) acceleration, the reaction to which the passengers experience as a centrifugal force. If the speed of the vehicle decreases, this is an acceleration in the opposite direction and mathematically a negative, sometimes called deceleration or retardation, and passengers experience the reaction to deceleration as an inertial force pushing them forward. Such negative accelerations are often achieved by retrorocket burning in spacecraft. Both acceleration and deceleration are treated the same, as they are both changes in velocity. Each of these accelerations (tangential, radial, deceleration) is felt by passengers until their relative (differential) velocity are neutralized in reference to the acceleration due to change in speed.

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für Accelerate
1. The brakes were also given a workout – brake and accelerate, brake and accelerate.
2. One purports to relieve stress, another to accelerate your metabolism.
3. Meanwhile, we must accelerate our progress towards a political agreement.
4. "Our consolidation will accelerate a lot of initiatives," he said.
5. The IMC should be asked to accelerate its activities.