magnitude and direction
more accurate magnitude and sence.
Force: Force is a vector quantity that has both magnitude and direction. It is represented by an arrow pointing in the direction of the force with its length indicating the strength of the force. Velocity: Velocity is a vector quantity that describes the rate at which an object changes its position. It includes both the speed of the object and the direction in which it is moving.
Resultant vector.
A measurement of force is represented in units such as newtons (N) or pounds-force (lbf). Force is a vector quantity that describes the interaction between two objects and the push or pull exerted by one object on another.
A vector quantity is any measurement where the direction is relevant, such as position, velocity, acceleration, force, electric field, etc.
Vector is NOT a scalar. The two (vector and scalar) are different things. A vector is a quantity (measurement) in which a direction is important. A scalar is a quantity in which a direction is NOT important.
Force: Force is a vector quantity that has both magnitude and direction. It is represented by an arrow pointing in the direction of the force with its length indicating the strength of the force. Velocity: Velocity is a vector quantity that describes the rate at which an object changes its position. It includes both the speed of the object and the direction in which it is moving.
Resultant vector.
Distance.
Length and direction.
A force is a vector - in two dimensions, you can represent it on paper as an arrow. Such vector/arrows have a size, and a direction. The size is usually called the "magnitude".
A measurement of force is represented in units such as newtons (N) or pounds-force (lbf). Force is a vector quantity that describes the interaction between two objects and the push or pull exerted by one object on another.
tension is a vector!(At first I thought it was a scalar too but this afternoon it was in our physics quiz,I answered scalar but I got it wrong because tension is a vector).this is the explanation:tension is the force producing such deformation.anything with force is a vector.Force always has direction.
Two or more forces combine, through vector addition, to give a net force.
A vector quantity is any measurement where the direction is relevant, such as position, velocity, acceleration, force, electric field, etc.
Both! Force is a quaternion quantity, the sum of a scalar force and a vector force. For example there are two gravitational forces, the scalar force Fs= - GmM d/dr 1/r = GmM/r^2 and the vector force Fv= Del -GmM/r = GmM R/r^3.
Gravity is a force, and forces have magnitude and direction; hence, it is a vector.
Scalar force and vector force. Force like many fields in physics is a quaternion.