A vector
A vector
True. A vector quantity has both magnitude and direction, while a scalar quantity only has magnitude.
Temperature is a scalar quantity. It has magnitude but not direction.
temperature is a scalar quantity................
Heat capacity is a scalar quantity, as it does not have a direction associated with it. It is a measure of the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount.
length is a scalar quantity buddy . but displacement is vector quantity. Length is a vector quantity If it is associated with direction.. Because having direction make it vector... S0 being vector or scalar depends upon how and where it is used..
vector quantity is magnitute and direction scalar is magnitute only
Heat capacity is a scalar quantity. It measures the amount of heat required to change the temperature of a substance by a given amount, without considering direction. Unlike vector quantities, which have both magnitude and direction, heat capacity only has magnitude, making it a scalar.
A scalar quantity added to a vector quantity is a complex quantity. An example is a complex number z = a + ib, a is the scalar and ib is the vector quantity.If the vector quantity is 3 dimensional, ib + jc + kd, then the scalar and vector forms a quaternion quantity.
A vector quantity.
No, a vector quantity and a scalar quantity are different. A vector has both magnitude and direction, while a scalar has only magnitude. Velocity and force are examples of vector quantities, while speed and temperature are examples of scalar quantities.
Work is a scalar quantity.