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14 meters

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βˆ™ 6y ago
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Anonymous

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βˆ™ 3y ago
5 hours
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Brayden Dean

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βˆ™ 3y ago
eff u it was 5 hours i hope u burn in hellΒ 
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Jahniah Thomas

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wrongΒ 
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Jahniah Thomas

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βˆ™ 3y ago

area and time

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Q: Which of the following could not be vector magnitudes?
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Related questions

Which of the following could be vector magnitudes?

C. 15 kilometers D. 30 m/s5 hours


What could not be vector magnitudes?

5 hours ^_^


Which of the following values could possibly be vector magnitudes meaning that combined with a direction they could become vector quanities?

6 miles5 meters30 kilometers/hourappexx30 kilometers/hour5 meters6 miles


What could be vector magnitudes?

30 m/s and 15 kilometers


Can the magnitude of the resultant of two vector be greater than the sum of magnitudes of indivisual vector?

No.


Can a vector have zero magnitudes if one of its component is not zero?

No. The magnitude of a vector can't be less than any component.


Why a unit vector is aone type of vector but a vector is not a unit vector?

A unit vector is a vector whose magnitude is one. Vectors can have magnitudes that are bigger or smaller than one so they would not be unit vectors.


Can A plus B equal zero when A and B have nonzero magnitudes?

If 'A' and 'B' are vectors, and their magnitudes are equal, andtheir directions are opposite, then their vector sum is zero.


Can the magnitude of the resultant of two vector be greater than the sum of magnitudes of individual vectors?

No.


What is the largest resultant vector that you could make using two vectors of magnitudes 10 Newtons and 9 Newtons?

19 Newtons They need to be in the same direction for the highest resultant


For two vector quantities to be equal they must have the same direction and the same?

Same direction and equal magnitudes.


Can a vector be less than its magnitude?

For a start, you can't compare a vector with a scalar, so you can't really compare a vector with its magnitude, either. To say which is larger, you can't even compare one vector with another - you can only compare their magnitudes.