Yes
temperature is a scalar quantity................
It can be described with a finite number of steps.
Analog transducers convert the input quantity into an analog output which is a continuous function of time. E.g.-L.V.D.T,Thermocouple, Strain guageDigital transducers convert the input quantity into an electrical output which is in the form of pulses.
Temperature is a scalar quantity. It has magnitude but not direction.
No, temperature is a scalar quantity. It only has magnitude and no direction.
An analog thermometer measures temperature by using a liquid (like mercury or alcohol) that expands or contracts with changes in temperature, which causes the level to rise or fall in a narrow tube to display the temperature.
Temperature is the quantity typically measured by a thermometer.
Yes, insofar as any quantity can be truly analog on a macroscopic scale. Disregarding the quantized nature of light at quantum dimensions, the frequency, wavelength, and amplitude of light aren't restricted to any set of definite values. Between any two levels you choose, no matter how close together they are, a wavelength, frequency, or amplitude can exist at a level between the two that you chose ... which is a pretty good working description of an analog quantity.
The term for the quantity of hotness is temperature. Temperature is a measure of the average thermal energy of the particles in a substance.
No, air temperature is a scalar quantity because it has magnitude only and no direction associated with it. It is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles in the air, without any specific direction.
Temperature is classified as a scalar quantity as it tends to be a number By definition temperature is proportional to the root mean square of the velocities of all the gas atoms, and is therefore irrelevant to direction.
All quantities in nature are analog. This is a rule of thumb that can be used to find out if a quantity is analog or not.examples of analog quantities aresound(from natural sources)vision etc.Analogue quantities are ones that change continuously.It is easy to misread this definition, what it doesn't mean is that analogue quantities are ones that change continually, or all the time.