Yes.
Velocity is a vector and therefore requires magnitude and direction:
Magnitude: 100 kph
Direction: North
The resultant velocity of a plane is 75 km/hr.
No. "Velocity" includes a magnitude and a direction. If any of the two are different, then the velocities are also different.
The craft's velocity is 232 meters per second north.
average velocity = miles/hours = (100 + 30)/(2 + 1) = 130/3 ≈ 43.33 miles/hour
Velocity is a vector quantity that measures speed (and also includes direction). 55 mph is a speed. 55mph North is a velocity.
Velocity = 790.514 m/s North (rounded)The idea is to divide the distance by the time.
3.00 m/s
The resultant velocity of a plane is 125 km/hr.
About 100km
Distance = Velocity*Time = 25.5*85 metres = 2167.5 metres.
The resultant velocity of a plane is 75 km/hr.
"ms" may be short for meters per second.It is possible that somebody was talking about velocity; in this case, "north" is the direction of the movement.
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.
The ancient rainforest north of Cairns (about 100km north) is the Daintree.
No. "Velocity" includes a magnitude and a direction. If any of the two are different, then the velocities are also different.
The car's net displacement is 0 miles (north 50 miles - south 50 miles). Since the total time taken is 5 hours, the velocity is 0 mph because velocity is displacement divided by time, resulting in 0 mph.
The change in velocity is 20 meters per second north. ( ? ? ? )