The exact direction on a compass is absolute direction. It is the direction down to degrees, minutes, and seconds. It is the direction as north, south, east, or west.
absolute direction means the direction which use the north, south, east, and west and the use of degrees, minutes and second.
Velocity is a vector which incorporates both speed (a scalar) and direction. So the speed (distance divided by time) must increase if the velocity increases as the direction (an angular measurement) does not affect the absolute value of the vector.
No. The velocity of an object is how fast it is moving as well as the direction of the motion. So when considering one dimension, the velocity can be positive or negative. The speed of the object is simply the magnitude (absolute value, in the case of one dimension) of the velocity, with no direction. Acceleration is the change in velocity and does include direction. So if an object has a positive velocity (in one dimension) and its speed increases, the acceleration is negative. However, if the speed of an object moving the negative direction increases, then the acceleration is negative, because the velocity becomes "more negative."
"Nothing is absolute, everything is relative"... Einstein
Absolute zero (zero kelvin) is -273.15 C
Nothing moves when the temperature is at absolute zero.
Absolute direction is the direction of place in reference to a map including the Earth's entire surface
Velocity is a vector and its magnitude depends on the direction. If it is positive in one direction, going in the opposite direction it is negative. But speed is a scalar and does not depend on the direction. It has the same value, whatever the direction. That is how the absolute value of velocity is speed.
Depends on your point of origin.
Th absolute value of a number is its distance, regardless of direction, form 0.
The absolute difference in the vertical direction is zero but the absolute difference in the horizontal direction will be the horizontal distance - which is the distance between the points.
The absolute value of an integer (or indeed any real number) is its distance from 0 - IGNORING the direction or sign. So, the absolute value of 5 is 5 and the absolute value of -5 is also 5.
The absolute value of an integer (or indeed any real number) is its distance from 0 - IGNORING the direction or sign. So, the absolute value of 5 is 5 and the absolute value of -5 is also 5.
Use Pythagoras' Theorem to find its value. For example, if it was moving at 3ms-1 in the x direction and 4ms-1 in the y direction, its absolute velocity would be the square root of (9+16), 5ms-1.
It's not. Unless you add a direction to speed it will not become velocity. Since positive and negative are sometimes used to denote direction, absolute value of velocity may equal speed (certain situations)
There is no absolute direction in space, so it is impossible to answer.
No, you've got it backwards. The absolute value of velocity equals speed. Velocity is speed with a direction; speed is just a number, without regard to direction.
Absolute value describes the distance of a number on the number line from 0 without considering which direction from zero the number lies. The absolute value of a number is never negative. The absolute value of 5 is 5.