60 mph is a scalar.60 mph north is a vector.
Vector quantities have direction as well as magnitude Vector: -displacement (10 m North) -velocity (100 mph south) Scalar -distance (10 m) -speed (100 mph)
scalar lol
A vector has magnitude and direction. A scalar has magnitude only. A car moving 60 mph North has a specific amouunt of kinetic energy, according to the formula KE = 1/2 * mass * velocity squared. If the car is moving 60 mph South is the KE the same?? ..Yes! Energy is a scalar! Nothing squared is a vector!! Length has direction. area does not
YES!!! Because velocity is speed in a given direction(vector). e.g 30 mph is a scalar quantity, but '30 mph in a northerly direction' is a vector quantity, because it has direction.
No it is not a vector
60 mph is a scalar.60 mph north is a vector.
Vector
Vector quantities have direction as well as magnitude Vector: -displacement (10 m North) -velocity (100 mph south) Scalar -distance (10 m) -speed (100 mph)
scalar lol
A scalar times a vector is a vector.
vector
A vector has magnitude and direction. A scalar has magnitude only. A car moving 60 mph North has a specific amouunt of kinetic energy, according to the formula KE = 1/2 * mass * velocity squared. If the car is moving 60 mph South is the KE the same?? ..Yes! Energy is a scalar! Nothing squared is a vector!! Length has direction. area does not
YES!!! Because velocity is speed in a given direction(vector). e.g 30 mph is a scalar quantity, but '30 mph in a northerly direction' is a vector quantity, because it has direction.
Vector is NOT a scalar. The two (vector and scalar) are different things. A vector is a quantity (measurement) in which a direction is important. A scalar is a quantity in which a direction is NOT important.
current is vector or scalar
When a scalar quantity(if it has positive magnitude) is multiplies by a vector quantity the product is another vector quantity with the magnitude as the product of two vectors and the direction and dimensions same as the multiplied vector quantity e.g. MOMENTUM