A vector plane is a two-dimensional space defined by a set of two non-parallel vectors. It represents all linear combinations of these vectors. In linear algebra, vector planes are used to visualize and understand relationships between vectors in space.
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.
If they are parallel, you can add them algebraically to get a resultant vector. Then you can resolve the resultant vector to obtain the vector components.
I think you meant to ask for finding a perpendicular vector, rather than parallel. If that is the case, the cross product of two non-parallel vectors will produce a vector which is perpendicular to both of them, unless they are parallel, which the cross product = 0. (a zero vector)
Vector A is parallel to the cross product of vectors B and C, and it is parallel to the axis that neither B or C lie along if the two other axes are defined as the axes that B and C lie along.
The energy vector, cmV = cP. The energy vector is parallel to the Momentum vector.
parallel
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]
Collinear forces are concurrent system type of forces, whereas parallel vector forces cannot be concurrent system type of force but they can be coplanar nonconcurrent system type of force
Translating a vector is sliding it parallel to the axes - without changing its magnitude or direction.
For a parallel plate capacitor is The poynting vector points everywhere radially outward of the volume between plates.
no a vector cannot have a component greater than the magnitude of vector