- Time - Scalar quantities often refer to time; the measurement of years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and even milliseconds.
- Increase/Decrease in Temperature - The measurement of the medium’s temperature is a scalar quantity; the measurement of the increase or decrease in the medium’s temperature is a vector quantity.
Sunday, November 9, 2014
Vector and scalar
scalar quantity is a one dimensional measurement of a quantity, like temperature, or weight. A vector has more than one number associated with it. A simple example is velocity. It has a magnitude, called speed, as well as a direction, like North or Southwest or 10 degrees west of North. You can have more that two numbers associated with a vector. For example you can add a height dimension to velocity and say, for example, ' I am going uphill at a 5 degree slope in the Northeast direction'. Vectors are frequently broken down into their components along an orthogonal coordinate system, like the x and y axes. So you can say the y-component of my speed is 3 km/sec and the x-component of my speed is 4 km/sec. The magnitude, or speed is the square root of the sum of the individual components, 5 in this case. The direction with respect to the x-axis would be given by the arctangent of Vy / Vx or 36.9 degrees.
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Good job!
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