No. "Velocity" includes a magnitude and a direction. If any of the two are different, then the velocities are also different.
Relative to the Earth, yes. And actually, neverminding the Earth's rotation, their velocities are still the same. The velocity of the Earth around the Sun, the Sun around the Milky Way and the Milky Way streaking out from a primordial universal "center" make the Earth's rotation - and indeed, the car's personal velocities, irrelevent. One could be going 100 kph and the other be dead on the road, and in a cosmic sense their velocities are identical. Only the energy each is expending differs in that scenario. Remember, running up and down the aisle of an airplane going 700 mph doesn't actually change your velocity. Just makes you tired!
No. Velocity includes a directional component. If the two were of the same mass and collided head-on, their velocities (being in the reverse directions) would cancel out.
The north American x-15 travels at mach 6.72
25 miles.
25 miles
No, the velocities of the two airplanes are not the same. Although they have the same speed of 300 km/h, their velocities are in opposite directions (north and south), so they are different. Velocity includes both speed and direction.
yes of course!
Relative to the Earth, yes. And actually, neverminding the Earth's rotation, their velocities are still the same. The velocity of the Earth around the Sun, the Sun around the Milky Way and the Milky Way streaking out from a primordial universal "center" make the Earth's rotation - and indeed, the car's personal velocities, irrelevent. One could be going 100 kph and the other be dead on the road, and in a cosmic sense their velocities are identical. Only the energy each is expending differs in that scenario. Remember, running up and down the aisle of an airplane going 700 mph doesn't actually change your velocity. Just makes you tired!
3.00 m/s
100 km and 75 km are displacements, NOT velocities. The resultant displacement is 25 km north,
Yes, two objects can have the same speed but different velocity if they are moving in different directions. Velocity is a vector quantity that includes both speed and direction, so even if two objects are moving at the same speed, if they are moving in different directions, their velocities will be different.
No
The Nile.
Distance = Velocity*Time = 25.5*85 metres = 2167.5 metres.
To the north pole
No. Velocity is described as a speed in a certain direction. Since they are in different directions, they are different velocities.
The Mississippi River is the transportation artery that travels from north to south in the United States. It is one of the longest rivers in North America and a key transportation route for goods and commodities.