Such a physical quantity is a vector.
A vector quantity is a physical quantity having magnitude and direction both. For e.g. velocity is a vector quantity and in physics it is velocity is generally denoted as: v (bar) = 2i+3j+4k where in general, i=velocity in x-direction j=velocity in y-direction k=velocity in z-direction 2,3 and 4 are magnitudes respective to their directions.
I don't think so - is something has a magnitude and a direction, by definition it is a vector.
A vector quantity refers to a physical quantity that has both magnitude and direction. Some examples of vector quantities include velocity (speed and direction), force (magnitude and direction), and displacement (distance and direction).
Vectors need both magnitude and direction.
A vector is a directed segment representing a quantity that has both magnitude and direction. <Hope this helped!>
A physical quantity that is specified by both magnitude and direction is a vector by definition.
Vector quantity
A Scalar Quantity is a physical quantity which has only magnitude and no direction associated with it . For eg,mass is a scalar quantity beause it has only magnitude (say 5 kg)but has no direction in which the magnitude acts towards.on the other hand a physical quantity which has both magnitude and direction is called a vector quantity.like weight is a vector quantity because it has magnitude along with direction(i.e. it always acts in the downward direction.
A vector quantity is a physical quantity having magnitude and direction both. For e.g. velocity is a vector quantity and in physics it is velocity is generally denoted as: v (bar) = 2i+3j+4k where in general, i=velocity in x-direction j=velocity in y-direction k=velocity in z-direction 2,3 and 4 are magnitudes respective to their directions.
I don't think so - is something has a magnitude and a direction, by definition it is a vector.
This is known as a vector quantity.
A quantity with both magnitude and direction is a Vector quantity.
A scalar quantity defines only magnitude, while a vector quantity defines both a magnitude and direction.
A scalar quantity defines only magnitude, while a vector quantity defines both a magnitude and direction.
A scalar quantity defines only magnitude, while a vector quantity defines both a magnitude and direction.
First of all you must be familiar with scalar and vector quantities. A scalar quantity is a physical quantity having only magnitude example length. A vector quantity is a physical quantity having both magnitude and directions. Now speed and distance are both scalar quantities which means their values are always positive. But if you considered velocity then there can be a negative value. Velocity is measured w.r.t the direction the object is going. Conventionally the direction is negative if the object is moving to the left of the initial point and positive for the other way.
A vector quantity refers to a physical quantity that has both magnitude and direction. Some examples of vector quantities include velocity (speed and direction), force (magnitude and direction), and displacement (distance and direction).