All of those are vectors except 'speed'.
Speed is the scalar magnitude of a velocity vector.
Acceleration and velocity are vector quantities. Speed, age, and temperature are not.
Examples of vector quantities include velocity (speed and direction) and force (magnitude and direction).
Vector quantities are quantities that have directionality as well as magnitude. Displacement (meters North) vs Distance (meters) Velocity (meters per second North) vs Speed (meters per second)
Examples of vector quantity are displacement, velocity, acceleration, momentum, force, E-filed, B-field, torque, energy, etc.
To make it easy, vector quantities have a direction aswell as a magnitude.While scalar quantities just have a magnitudeAn example of a scalar quantity is "Speed" and the vector quantity would be "Velocity"
Acceleration and velocity are vector quantities. Speed, age, and temperature are not.
Examples of vector quantities include velocity (speed and direction) and force (magnitude and direction).
scalar quantities have magnitude only while vector quantities have both magnitude and direction. e.g.s of scalar quantities- distance, mass, temperature, speed e.g.s of vector quantities-displacement, velocity, acceleration, weight, force
Vector quantities are quantities that have directionality as well as magnitude. Displacement (meters North) vs Distance (meters) Velocity (meters per second North) vs Speed (meters per second)
. Velocity Acceleration
You forgot to include the list, but typical vector quantities include position, velocity, acceleration, force, torque, momentum, rotational momentum.
Examples of vector quantity are displacement, velocity, acceleration, momentum, force, E-filed, B-field, torque, energy, etc.
To make it easy, vector quantities have a direction aswell as a magnitude.While scalar quantities just have a magnitudeAn example of a scalar quantity is "Speed" and the vector quantity would be "Velocity"
Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction. They are represented by arrows to show the direction and their length represents the magnitude. Common examples include velocity, acceleration, and force.
Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction, such as velocity and force. Scalar quantities have only magnitude and no specific direction, such as speed and temperature.
No. Force and acceleration are vector quantities.
A vector quantity is a physical quantity that has both magnitude (size or amount) and direction. Examples of vector quantities include velocity, force, and acceleration. This is in contrast to scalar quantities, which only have magnitude.