Displacement is a vector quantity and not a scalar quantity. This is because displacement has both magnitude and direction.
Displacement is a vector.
scalar lol
A scalar times a vector is a vector.
vector
A scalar is a single quantity that is represented by just a magnitude, such as temperature or speed. A vector is a quantity that has both magnitude and direction, like force or velocity. Scalars can be thought of as a subset of vectors with zero direction component.
No, it is scalar A2: A displacement vector is any change in position. if you walk 25 feet forward this is a displacement vector of 25ft in this direction (based on your placement of your axis) A general form is dx=Xi+Xj+Xk
current is vector or scalar
vector
scalar direction is a vector quantity
scalar
Scalar
Distance is a scalar. But displacement is a vector.
An earthquake is neither a scalar nor a vector. It is an event.