Meters per second squared, Kilometers per hour, Meters, and Miles per hour.
With an arrow above the respective alphabet used to determine the quantity.
Miles per hour and meters.
force-newton
can't you find it on your own??
Displacement and Distance
That means that the quantity has no associated direction.
Which of the following is a vector quantity
Yes. Every force is a vector, requiring both a magnitude and direction to completely describe it.
Momentum is a vector quantity. We know that momentum is the product of mass and velocity, and velocity has direction. That makes velocity a vector quantity. And the product of a scalar quantity and a vector quantity is a vector quantity.
A vector quantity
can't you find it on your own??
That means that the quantity has no associated direction.
Which of the following is a vector quantity
Yes. Every force is a vector, requiring both a magnitude and direction to completely describe it.
True, a vector quantity has direction, and a scalar quantity does not.
Momentum is a vector quantity. We know that momentum is the product of mass and velocity, and velocity has direction. That makes velocity a vector quantity. And the product of a scalar quantity and a vector quantity is a vector quantity.
displacement is a vector quantity
A vector quantity
yes, momentum is a vector quantity.
Angular momentum is a vector quantity. Angular velocity, which is a vector quantity, is multiplied by inertia, which is a scalar quantity.
... a vector quantity. Speed is a scalar, meaning only the magnitude (a number) is used. If the direction of a movement is of interest, you use the word "velocity", instead, to describe the vector. A vector has both a magnitude and a direction.
A vector