A round-trip ride to school and back
B. A round-trip ride to school and back
A round-trip ride to school and back
Yes. If you end up where you started, your displacement is zero, but the distance you travel is the actual amount of ground covered. For example, if you made a round trip of 50 miles, your displacement would be zero miles, but your distance would be 50 miles. This is because the final position and the initial position are the same. Round trips always have a displacement of zero.
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The distance you travel is a scalar quantity. For example, if you drive 500km round trip, your total distance traveled is 500km. However, your change in position, which is displacement, is a vector quantity, which includes direction. So if you drive 250km North, and then drive back home 250km South, your displacement will be zero because of vector addition. 250km North would be +250km, and 250km South would be -250km. So the displacement for your trip would be 250km + - 250 km = 0 km. Your total change in position for your trip would be zero.
No
Mostar Round-Trip was created in 2011.
-- Displacement is the straight-line difference between where you ended and where you started, regardless of the route you actually took. -- Distance is every inch you covered on the way there, including every curve, round-the-block, double-back, and side-trip to see the sites. -- Distance can never be less than displacement.
Round Trip to Mars was created on 1957-09-23.
As low as $186 round trip.
That is the correct spelling of the term "round trip" (there and back). If it is used as an adjective, it should be hyphenated (e.g. round-trip ticket) because otherwise it could be read as two separate adjectives.