Motion is defined as a change in the location of an object.
Motion can be seen in the form of running water, a book falling off a table, rattling windows, and so on. Displacement, distance, time, and speed are used to explain the motion. It can be characterized into two:
Uniform motion is described as an object traveling in a straight line at a constant velocity while traversing equal distances in equivalent time intervals, regardless of time.
Non-uniform motion is described as the movement of an item at a variable speed that does not cover the same distance in equal intervals of time, regardless of the interval length.
Zero uniform velocity motion
A consistent rate of change of distance per unit of time is expressed by the term uniform velocity.
A change in an object's position over time can be defined as zero uniform velocity motion.
Uniform velocity motion with zero acceleration is called zero uniform velocity motion.
The possibility of an item at rest is eliminated if the zero refers to the "uniform velocity" rather than the motion.