Physics, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

If the displacement of a body is Zero , is the distance covered by it necessarily be zero ?

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Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

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Answer...

Distance is dedefined as the total distance covered in per unit time whereas displacement is defined as length of path between final and initial.

For example in a circular path when the particle comes back to its initial position the displacement covered will be zero where as the displacement will be equal to circumference of the circle that is 2πr.

so it is not necessary that if the displacement of a body is zero then its distance will also be zero.

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Answered by xJAANIx
3

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Because the initial and final points will be same and there will be zero distance between them. But in the same case distance will not be zero and will be given by the length of actual path traveled by body. Hence, displacement can be zero, even if distance covered is non-zero.

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