Usually no. Say you need to fly to New York from Chicago. The resultant displacement would be the straightline distance between the two cities. But you fly through Atlanta (Everything seems to go through Atlanta). You would end up flying about twice the total distance between the cities.
The resultant vector of adding two vectors is a displacement vector, not a distance vector. Displacement is a change in position measured from the starting point to the end point, while distance is the total length of the path traveled.
No, the displacement cannot be longer than the distance traveled. Displacement is the shortest distance between the starting and ending points regardless of the path taken, while distance traveled is the total length of the actual path taken.
No, displacement and distance traveled are two different measurements. Distance traveled is the total length of the path taken, while displacement is the change in position from the starting point to the ending point, taking into account direction.
Distance is equal to displacement when an object moves in a straight line without changing direction. In such cases, the magnitude of displacement is equal to the total distance traveled. Displacement is a vector quantity that takes into account both the distance traveled and the direction in which the object moved.
Displacement is equal to the distance traveled when the motion is along a straight line. This happens when the motion is in one direction without any changes in direction. In such cases, the magnitude of displacement is equal to the total distance traveled.
No. Displacement is how far an object is from its original position. This means that if an object traveled in a circle and returned to its original point, it will have a displacement of 0 while the distance will be whatever the circumference of the circle was. Hope that helps.
The magnitude of the displacement is always equal to or greater than the distance traveled. This is because the magnitude of displacement is the shortest distance between the initial and final positions, while distance traveled is the total length of the path taken.
When the motion is in a straight line.
Distance is the total length of the path traveled, while displacement is the shortest distance between the start and end points. Friction does not directly affect distance or displacement, as it is a force that opposes motion. However, friction may impact the energy needed to overcome obstacles along the distance traveled or when calculating displacement.
Not possible. The displacement could be equal to the distance traveled ... if the route of travel was a straight line ... or less than the distance traveled ... if the route of travel was wavy and wiggly. But you can never wind up farther from your starting point than the distance you travel.
Displacement is the shortest distance between the starting and ending points of an object's motion, while distance is the total length of the path traveled by the object.
Distance is the total length traveled by an object, while displacement is the shortest distance between the starting and ending points, taking into account direction.