It is a scalar quantity unless you define direction, then it becomes a vector quantity.
Thirty meters at sixty miles per hour would require 1.12 seconds.
No. It is a speed (a scalar) but not a velocity (a vector).
60 minutes or 1 hour.
Meters per hour x 0.000621 = miles per hour.
A vector includes information about a magnitude, and a direction. For example, a velocity of "30 km/hour, towards the north-west".A vector includes information about a magnitude, and a direction. For example, a velocity of "30 km/hour, towards the north-west".A vector includes information about a magnitude, and a direction. For example, a velocity of "30 km/hour, towards the north-west".A vector includes information about a magnitude, and a direction. For example, a velocity of "30 km/hour, towards the north-west".
No, it's a scalar quantity. ;)
Meters per second squared, Kilometers per hour, Meters, and Miles per hour.
Thirty meters at sixty miles per hour would require 1.12 seconds.
Meters Miles per hour
-kilometers per hour-meters-meters per second squaredA P E X (:
30 kilometers/hour 5 meters 6 miles Apex?
Meters per second squared, Kilometers per hour, Meters, and Miles per hour.
No. It is a speed (a scalar) but not a velocity (a vector).
(55 miles per hour) is a scalar. (55 miles per hour heading north) is a vector.
North at 45 miles per hour. A vector has a direction and a magnitude.
resultant vector is a vector which will have the same effect as the sum of all the component vectors taken together.
No, there is no direction associated with it.