Heat is energy. It and temperature are both scalars.
Force, velocity, acceleration, and displacement are vectors. Mass, temperature, time, cost, and speed are scalars (not vectors).
Yes, a vector can be represented in terms of a unit vector which is in the same direction as the vector. it will be the unit vector in the direction of the vector times the magnitude of the vector.
-- dollars -- weeks -- kilograms -- degrees (of temperature) -- pages -- watts -- decibels -- joules -- lumens
The zero vector is both parallel and perpendicular to any other vector. V.0 = 0 means zero vector is perpendicular to V and Vx0 = 0 means zero vector is parallel to V.
temperature is a scalar quantity................
No temperature is a scalar quantity.
no
Not at all. There is no vector counterpart of any time, temperature, cost, or mass that you encounter.
Heat is energy. It and temperature are both scalars.
Acceleration and velocity are vector quantities. Speed, age, and temperature are not.
Temperature is a scalar quantity. It has magnitude but not direction.
All of those are vectors except 'speed'. Speed is the scalar magnitude of a velocity vector.
3.00 could be a vector or scalar, depending on the math problem that you are working on. If it is temperature, length, or mass, then it would be the scaler in your problem.
A vector is a quantity with a direction that matters, like force, velocity, acceleration, etc. A scalar is a quantity with no direction, like temperature, cost, mass, etc.
A scalar quantity because temperature has no geographic direction.
Force, velocity, acceleration, and displacement are vectors. Mass, temperature, time, cost, and speed are scalars (not vectors).