No, electrical charge is a vector quantity because it has both magnitude and direction.
Charge is a scalar quantity because it only has magnitude and no direction.
Electrostatic potential is a scalar quantity. It represents the potential energy per unit charge at a given point in an electric field.
Charge is a Scalar Quantity as it only have Magnitude not Direction.Like in 10 Coulomb of Charge, it has 10 as magnitude and Coulomb as Unit. But this is not showing any information which tell us that it is in a particular direction.
A scalar quantity is something that only has magnitude and no direction. Any physical quantity that has both magnitude and direction, such as velocity or force, cannot be a scalar quantity.
No, mass is not a scalar quantity. It is a scalar quantity. Scalars have only magnitude and no direction.
Charge has no direction. Therefore it is a scalar.
Charge is a scalar quantity because it only has magnitude and no direction.
Electrostatic potential is a scalar quantity. It represents the potential energy per unit charge at a given point in an electric field.
specific charge is because a physical quantity can be complete only when by giving magnitude only. Here the physical quantity is complete by its magnitude.
Charge is a Scalar Quantity as it only have Magnitude not Direction.Like in 10 Coulomb of Charge, it has 10 as magnitude and Coulomb as Unit. But this is not showing any information which tell us that it is in a particular direction.
Because it only has magnitude and not direction.
Electric potential is a scalar quantity since work done and charge are scalars
Electrical charge is a fundamental dimension all by itself, and is not derived fromany other fundamental units. The unit of charge is the Coulomb, which is definedas 1 ampere-second.
temperature is a scalar quantity................
Work is a scalar quantity.
The physical quantity with the SI unit JC^-1 is the electric permittivity. It is a scalar quantity because it describes the ability of a material to store and transmit electrical energy.
A scalar quantity is something that only has magnitude and no direction. Any physical quantity that has both magnitude and direction, such as velocity or force, cannot be a scalar quantity.