No.
Because vectors have direction as well as magnitude, you must take the direction into account when you add them.
Example:
Vector A parallel to [0,0; 0,4]
Vector B parallel to [0,0; 3,0]
These vectors are at right angles to each other Vector A has a magnitude of 4, Vector B an magnitude of 3.
A + B = has a magnitude of 5, parallel to [0,0;3,4]
Answer: A vector is always the product of 2 scalars
Vectors have direction. Scalars don't.
Because scalars do not take in the direction but just the magnitude while vectors can. You can add vectors ONLY if they are in the same direction.
Heat is energy. It and temperature are both scalars.
scalars are those quantities which have magnitude as well as unit.and vector are those quantities which has magnitude,unit as well as direction.
no!!!only scalars and scalars and only vectors and vectors can be added.
Answer: A vector is always the product of 2 scalars
Measurable quantities are vectors or scalars. "Space" is not a measurable quantity. "Volume" is. It's a scalar.
The result is a vector.
Vectors have direction. Scalars don't.
It has both velocity and direction. A vector has direction and magnitude.
Both scalars and vectors have quantity. The difference is a vector has quantity and direction, whereas scalars only have quantity.
Because scalars do not take in the direction but just the magnitude while vectors can. You can add vectors ONLY if they are in the same direction.
A scalar is a real quantity like distance and a vector is a vector quantity like displacement.Displacement is the product of a distance and a direction,Displacement =DistancexDirection.
Heat is energy. It and temperature are both scalars.
No they are scalars, though the rate of change could be a vector and the wind is definitely a vector (both direction and speed)
scalars are those quantities which have magnitude as well as unit.and vector are those quantities which has magnitude,unit as well as direction.