Science, asked by Chandumuramalla9485, 1 year ago

Assertion : Current and time both have direction as well as magnitude but still are not considered Vector.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous345
3

Here, if you observe we are not considering the angles between the current/time but directly considering them as Incoming and Outgoing. Hence, laws of vector addition are being violated so they cannot be referred to as Vector Quantity.

Answered by Martinoforiagyei
1

Firstly, let us look at the definition that you have given for a vector, "A quantity which has both direction and magnitude".


If this was true, let us consider Current. It certainly has both magnitude and direction. Does it make it a vector? No. A vector needs to follow triangle/parallelogram laws of vector addition.





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