No. Displacement is just the final location minus the initial location,
regardless of the path.
No, the displacement of a particle only depends on the straight-line distance between the initial and final positions, not the actual path taken. It is a vector quantity that represents how far out of place an object is compared to a reference point.
Displacement is equal to the volume of fluid displaced by an object. The displacement of an object in a fluid depends on the volume of the object itself, not the volume of the fluid.
Yes and no.Some use "displacement" only to describe a change in the position of an object from some initial starting point to some ending point. That is, there is a distinction between "position" and "displacement." The position would be defined relative to a reference point. In that case the arrow depends only on where the particle was and where it ended up and the reference point does not matter.Others use a definition for displacement which describes the difference between an object's position and a fixed reference point. That is, how far an object is displaced from a certain point even if the object had never been at that point. A distinction between position and displacement is not made. For this latter definition, the choice of reference point will make a difference in the direction of the arrow.In physics problems one usually only cares about the changes in position (and velocity, etc) and the choice of reference point will not affect these.
Distance is independent of path, as it is the total length traveled from point A to point B, regardless of the route taken. Displacement, on the other hand, is the shortest distance between the initial and final points and is also independent of path.
One factor of course would be how fast the wave is moving.
No, the displacement of a particle only depends on the straight-line distance between the initial and final positions, not the actual path taken. It is a vector quantity that represents how far out of place an object is compared to a reference point.
yes
Displacement is equal to the volume of fluid displaced by an object. The displacement of an object in a fluid depends on the volume of the object itself, not the volume of the fluid.
Yes and no.Some use "displacement" only to describe a change in the position of an object from some initial starting point to some ending point. That is, there is a distinction between "position" and "displacement." The position would be defined relative to a reference point. In that case the arrow depends only on where the particle was and where it ended up and the reference point does not matter.Others use a definition for displacement which describes the difference between an object's position and a fixed reference point. That is, how far an object is displaced from a certain point even if the object had never been at that point. A distinction between position and displacement is not made. For this latter definition, the choice of reference point will make a difference in the direction of the arrow.In physics problems one usually only cares about the changes in position (and velocity, etc) and the choice of reference point will not affect these.
No.
Distance is independent of path, as it is the total length traveled from point A to point B, regardless of the route taken. Displacement, on the other hand, is the shortest distance between the initial and final points and is also independent of path.
One factor of course would be how fast the wave is moving.
The answer will depend on what information is shown in the graph!
Velocity is speed in a particular direction. Usually miles per hour or metres pet second . So that means that velocity is distance divided by time. Displacement is a distance measured in miles, metres etc. And is the difference between the starting position and the finishing position.
The answer will depend on its acceleration.
Magnetic force is the force exerted on a charged particle moving through a magnetic field. The strength and direction of the force depend on the charge of the particle, its velocity, and the strength and orientation of the magnetic field.
As of 2014, an odontologist can earn between $75,000 and $150,000 a year. The actual amount will depend on how busy the odontologist is.