Pressure is no vector. Pressure is a scalar. Pressure-gradient is a vector.why pressure is a scalar
No, pressure is a scalar quantity. It has no direction, it has just a value.
(Stress in continuum mechanics is described by a second-order tensor.)
Pressure is a scalar quantity that is given in units of force per unit of area.
Yes, but it is scalar not scaler.
pressure is a scalar quantity.
scalar quantity has only magnitude whereas vector quantity has magnitude as well as direction
When something is scalar, it means it has a magnitude, but not a direction. Volume is a scalar because there is no direction of volume.
pressure
increasing the temperature or pressure
The relation is decribed by the law of Clapeyron: pV= nRT where - p is the pressure - V is the volume n is the quantity of material - R is the gas constant - T is the temperature
Scaler. Its vector counterpart is the electric field.
A scaler quantity is one with magnitude (size) only. ie. not direction dependent. Speed is a scaler quantity, however, velocity is a vector quantity, it has size and direction.
No.
never
Work is a scalar quantity.
It is a "scalar quantity", it refers to a quantity that has magnitude but no direction, as distinct from a vector quantity
Work is a scalar.
Scaler Quantity- quantities which are described only by magnitude.Vector Quantity- quantities which are described by both magnitude as well as direction.
Electric current is a scalar.
If a direction is relevant, then it is NOT a scalar, but a vector.
Its simply called "Distance"
A force is a vector. That simply means that the direction in which you apply a force is relevant.