Physics, asked by sandipbiswa, 1 year ago

are two vector will the same magnitude necessarily equal ? Give your reason


vIsHal005: no they can not be equal

Answers

Answered by sharathkumar1
1
There are already very good answers to this question, but maybe you need some visual feedback. In the figure below, the three vectors have the same magnitude, so they form an equilateral triangle. Vector c may be interpreted as the resultant of vectors a and b. In this case the tail of vector b is at the end of a, so we may consider that c is the resultant of the sum of these two vectors: a+b=ca+b=c. Any configuration similar to this one may work.
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vIsHal005: so why u r confusing him just tell the accurate answer
sandipbiswa: ya accurate answer
vIsHal005: see mate a vector equals it's magnitude *it's direction
sandipbiswa: ok
vIsHal005: so to be equality of two vectors these two quantities must be same for them
sandipbiswa: thanks
vIsHal005: ur most welcome
Answered by Bhoomisahubhoomi
2
We have two vectors with the same direction, but the magnitudes (or length of the vectors) are different. Vector a does not equal vector b in this example. This example seems pretty simple, because the same rule applies for scalars; if the magnitude is different, the quantities are not equal.

I hope it will help you

vIsHal005: gr8
sandipbiswa: ya
vIsHal005: Mark her brainilest bro
sandipbiswa: is that ok
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