A magnetic field is neither: it is a vector field with both direction and quantity.
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..
Scalar quantity is when you have a magnitude but no direction such as speed
A scalar quantity is something that has magnitude but no directional component. Examples of scalar quantities include time, mass, energy, speed, temperature, and volume.
If a quantity does not have a direction, its a scalar quantity, not a vector quantity.
Volume is a scalar quantity because it only has magnitude and no direction. It measures the amount of space occupied by an object or substance.
no, it's a vector dude
Yes, they are all scalars.
A magnetic field is neither: it is a vector field with both direction and quantity.
Definitely current is a SCALAR. Current density, of course, is a vector quantity Current = charge / time Both charge and time are scalars Current density = current / area Here area is a vector quantity Hence scalar product of current density and area give scalar quantity i.e. current. So electric current is a scalar Of course we assign +ve and -ve sign to currents. It is not because of direction as we do incase of vectors. But it is only algebraic sign.
temperature is a scalar quantity................
it is a scalar quantity
Scalar quantity.
Work is a scalar quantity.
A scalar is a quantity that has no direction. Examples include: -- cost -- temperature -- speed -- energy -- work -- mass -- weight -- volume -- density -- duration
Force cannot be a scalar quantity.
It isn't, because a mass can only be positive - there are no negative masses. Also mass is only referring to one thing and this doesn't give as much information as a vector quantity. Mass is scalar.