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None are as they do not properly describe a vector. A vector must have a direction and velocity.
north, 35 degrees north of east
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The exact direction on a compass is absolute direction. It is the direction down to degrees, minutes, and seconds. It is the direction as north, south, east, or west.
north, 35 degrees north of east
None are as they do not properly describe a vector. A vector must have a direction and velocity.
degrees
north, 35 degrees north of east
nobody nos that anser
North East
all
If you look at a compass, it points north. Each mark is one degree, and there are 360 on a compass, so 30 degrees east of north means that you head towards the thirtieth park to the east (right) of north. On a watch, if 12 o'clock is north, then 1 o'clock is thirty degrees east of it.
The exact direction on a compass is absolute direction. It is the direction down to degrees, minutes, and seconds. It is the direction as north, south, east, or west.
No, it is vector. East is the direction for the 70 meters, thus a vector.
You would be traveling North.The exact direction is 2 degrees East of true North.
Use a compass to identify which direction is north. Face that direction, then turn ninety degrees to your right. You are facing east.
Nothing. A magnitude is part of a vector. For example, for the vector "10 metres due East", 10 metres is the magnitude of the vector and East is the direction of the vector.