. Velocity
Acceleration
vector quantities are specified by both size and direction.
e.g.s of these are displacement, velocity, acceleration, force
acceleration and velocity
Acceleration and velocity
Vector quantity.
scalar quantity has only magnitude whereas vector quantity has magnitude as well as direction
Associates the direction taken with the speedAny quantity that has direction and magnitude associated with it is considered a vector quantity. An example of a vector quantity would be velocity. It must be expressed with reference to a direction.-aerol_
A scalar quantity is a non-vector quantity. In a vector quantity, direction is relevant. In a scalar quantity, it is not. For example, mass (measured in kg.) is a scalar; force is usually indicated as a vector (magnitude in Newton, but the direction is also relevant).A scalar quantity is a non-vector quantity. In a vector quantity, direction is relevant. In a scalar quantity, it is not. For example, mass (measured in kg.) is a scalar; force is usually indicated as a vector (magnitude in Newton, but the direction is also relevant).A scalar quantity is a non-vector quantity. In a vector quantity, direction is relevant. In a scalar quantity, it is not. For example, mass (measured in kg.) is a scalar; force is usually indicated as a vector (magnitude in Newton, but the direction is also relevant).A scalar quantity is a non-vector quantity. In a vector quantity, direction is relevant. In a scalar quantity, it is not. For example, mass (measured in kg.) is a scalar; force is usually indicated as a vector (magnitude in Newton, but the direction is also relevant).
Length is a scalar quantity. By definition, a vector quantity has both magnitude (ie. length) and direction. Length does not have direction, so it is not a vector. Length is a scalar quantity. Length is a scalar quantity. yes
It does not require direction, so it's a scalar quantity.
A physical quantity that is specified by both magnitude and direction is a vector by definition.
A vector quantity has both size (magnitude) and direction involved but a scalar quantity only has size involved and not direction.
True ,velocity is a vector quantity ,it is specified by a magnitude and direction.
A size or direction
a vector
A scaler quantity is one with magnitude (size) only. ie. not direction dependent. Speed is a scaler quantity, however, velocity is a vector quantity, it has size and direction.
As soon as you called it "height", you specified a direction. That made it a vector.
a vector
... then what is the question?
a vector
A scalar quantity is a physical measure of size--or extent--,while, on the other hand, a vector quantity is a physical measurement of size--or extent--AND direction. A shape has size--or extent--but does not have direction; and I would, therefore, classify it as having a scalar quantity
A vector quantity not only has a size, it also has a direction. Velocity is a vector quantity. "30 mph north" and "30 mph east" are different velocities. "Speed" is a part of velocity ... its size alone, without its direction, so speed is not a vector quantity.