Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters, kilometers, newtons, or pounds-force for displacement or force; meters per second or kilometers per hour for velocity; and newtons or pounds-force for acceleration.
Units such as meters (m) for displacement, meters per second (m/s) for velocity, newtons (N) for force, and teslas (T) for magnetic field strength can be used to describe vector quantities.
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters (m) for displacement, meters per second (m/s) for velocity, Newtons (N) for force, and Newtons per coulomb (N/C) for electric field.
Units such as kilograms, seconds, and degrees Celsius can only describe scalar quantities. These units represent values that have magnitude but no direction, unlike vector quantities which require both magnitude and direction for complete description.
Physical quantities can be broadly categorized as scalar or vector quantities. Scalar quantities have only magnitude, like mass or temperature, while vector quantities have both magnitude and direction, like velocity or force. Other types of physical quantities include derived quantities (obtained from combinations of base quantities) and dimensionless quantities (without units).
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters (m), newtons (N), and kilograms (kg) for displacement, force, and mass, respectively. Additionally, vector quantities like velocity can be measured in meters per second (m/s) and acceleration in meters per second squared (m/s^2).
speed and direction
Units such as meters (m) for displacement, meters per second (m/s) for velocity, newtons (N) for force, and teslas (T) for magnetic field strength can be used to describe vector quantities.
Units that are used for measures in which the direction is relevant. Example are displacement, velocity, acceleration, force.
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters (m) for displacement, meters per second (m/s) for velocity, Newtons (N) for force, and Newtons per coulomb (N/C) for electric field.
Units such as kilograms, seconds, and degrees Celsius can only describe scalar quantities. These units represent values that have magnitude but no direction, unlike vector quantities which require both magnitude and direction for complete description.
Physical quantities can be broadly categorized as scalar or vector quantities. Scalar quantities have only magnitude, like mass or temperature, while vector quantities have both magnitude and direction, like velocity or force. Other types of physical quantities include derived quantities (obtained from combinations of base quantities) and dimensionless quantities (without units).
Vector quantities can be described using units such as meters (m), newtons (N), and kilograms (kg) for displacement, force, and mass, respectively. Additionally, vector quantities like velocity can be measured in meters per second (m/s) and acceleration in meters per second squared (m/s^2).
Meters per second squared, Kilometers per hour, Meters, and Miles per hour.
No, grams are units of mass, not vector quantities. Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction, such as velocity or force. An example unit for vector quantity would be Newtons for force or meters per second for velocity.
Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction, so they are expressed in units such as meters per second (velocity) or newtons (force). Scalar quantities only have magnitude and are represented by units such as meters (distance) or kilograms (mass).
Units such as meters, seconds, kilograms, and kelvin are examples of units that can only describe scalar quantities. These units do not have a direction associated with them and only quantify the magnitude of a physical quantity.
-kilometers per hour-meters-meters per second squaredA P E X (: