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Velocity is displacement divided by time
Distance has no concept of direction and can be measured even if a person walks 2 miles in the shape of a triangle, he or she has still walked 2 miles. Displacement, however, it the distance measured between two particular points in a certain direction.
Simply multiply force x distance. This assumes that the force is in the same direction as the movement.
Distance is a scalarwithout direction and displacement is a vector with distance and direction.
Speed is a measure of the amount of distance you travel in a given time: speed = distance / time.Velocity is a 'vector' quantity - it has magnitude (size) like speed but also direction.Similarly, displacement is the vector analogue of distance - it records not only how far you've travelled but in what direction you've moved as well.Thus if you want to know how far in a particular direction you go in a given time you check velocity = displacement / time
That is called velocity.
Speed =distance/time Speed in a particular direction become velocity, a vector, which has magnitude and direction.
velocity (distance/time)
It would not depend on the direction with respect to the nucleus. The direction of the electron has no effect on the distance of the electron from the nucleus.
Velocity is displacement divided by time
Velocity (distance in a particular direction) is speed over time. You should be able to use this formula to calculate how your distance changes with time.
Direction with respect to the nucleus
The distance and direction between starting and stopping positions is displacement.
Distance has no concept of direction and can be measured even if a person walks 2 miles in the shape of a triangle, he or she has still walked 2 miles. Displacement, however, it the distance measured between two particular points in a certain direction.
Direction, and distance.
aim
No, you cannot.