Any quantity for which a direction is relevant.
Any quantity for which a direction is relevant.
Any quantity for which a direction is relevant.
Any quantity for which a direction is relevant.
Any quantity for which a direction is relevant.
direction
Yes, it is.
It is a scalar quantity unless you define direction, then it becomes a vector quantity.
a variable
Scalar quantity is when you have a magnitude but no direction such as speed
direction
'Force' is a vecter quanity.
Yes, it is.
It is a scalar quantity unless you define direction, then it becomes a vector quantity.
An acceleration index is a vector quanity, which is defined as the rate at which a defined object changes its velocity.
A vector quality is defined as a quality that is described completely by both a direction and a magnitude. Velocity describes what direction something is moving as well as the speed it is moving, which makes it a vector quality.
A scalar quantity defines only magnitude, while a vector quantity defines both a magnitude and direction.
It can be both true or false - you can treat distance as a scalar, or as a vector. If you say that (say) the distance from the cities of Cochabamba and Quillacollo is 13 kilometers - WITHOUT specifiying the direction - then it is a scalar. If you also say that Quillacollo is to the east of Cochabamba, then it is a vector.
Finte is the opposite of infinite, finite is a known quanity that has an ending quanity
Displacement is a vector quanity that measures the difference between final position and initial position. Distance is a scalar quanity the measures the total length traveled. For example, imagine you begin stationary at any location and walk along the outline of a 100ft circumference circle, returning you to your starting location. Your distance traveled will be 100 feet, your displacement will be 0 due to your initial position and final position being identical.
a variable
a standard