Physics, asked by nandanappillai, 10 months ago

A Vector is directed along 30 degrees west of north and another vector is directed along 15 degrees south of east. Their resultant can't be along

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Answered by amyleah04
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Vector, in physics, a quantity that has both magnitude and direction. It is typically represented by an arrow whose direction is the same as that of the quantity and whose length is proportional to the quantity's magnitude. Although a vector has magnitude and direction, it does not have position.

The direction of a vector is the direction along which it acts. It has a certain magnitude. For example, we say 10 N force in the east. Here, 10 N is the magnitude and towards the east is the direction. The direction is specified using a unit vector.

Two vectors are equal if they have the same magnitude and the same direction. Just like scalars which can have positive or negative values, vectors can also be positive or negative. A negative vector is a vector which points in the direction opposite to the reference positive direction.

A vector quantity has a direction and a magnitude, while a scalar has only a magnitude. You can tell if a quantity is a vector by whether or not it has a direction associated with it. Example: Speed is a scalar quantity, but velocity is a vector that specifies both a direction as well as a magnitude.

To find a direction vector or a normal vector for a straight line all we have to do is write the equation in the general form. We can then read directly from the equation. The general equation of a straight line: ax + by + c = 0.

Two vectors are equal if they have the same magnitude and the same direction. Just like scalars which can have positive or negative values, vectors can also be positive or negative. A negative vector is a vector which points in the direction opposite to the reference positive direction.

Two types of multiplication involving two vectors are defined: the so-called scalar product (or "dot product") and the so-called vector product (or "cross product"). ... When two arbitrary vectors are multiplied, the scalar product has a similar meaning, but the magnitude of the number is a little different.

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