Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction
I think u can also look it up on Google for a more in depth answer but this is basicaly right
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Scalar quantities - quantities that only include magnitude Vector quantities - quantities with both magnitude and direction
It is necessary to know the magnitude and the direction of the vector.
Yes, it is a vector quantity.
Vector quantities are those that must be described with both a magnitude and direction. Scalar quantities can be described with only a single value.
Scalar quantities are defined as quantities that have only a mganitude. Vector quantities have magnitude and direction. Some example of this include Scalar Vector Mass Weight length Displacement Speed Velocity Energy Acceleration
Mainly because they aren't scalar quantities. A vector in the plane has two components, an x-component and a y-component. If you have the x and y components for each vector, you can add them separately. This is very similar to the addition of scalar quantities; what you can't add directly, of course, is their lengths. Similarly, a vector in space has three components; you can add each of the components separately.
No. Force and acceleration are vector quantities.
The square of a vector quantity is the vector magnitude times itself without a change in the orientation.
Vector quantities include magnitude and direction.
Charge is not a vector.
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
There is no such thing as scalar and vector forces. However, there are scalar and vector QUANTITIES, and force is a vector quantity, as all forces have direction and magnitude. Scalar quantities, on the other hand, have only magnitude and no direction.