Biology, asked by shubhammantri5756, 7 months ago

What is the difference between newton and magnitude

Answers

Answered by Peterprince
0

Explanation:

It has both a magnitude as well as a direction. A force of 5 N ( Newton, a unit of force) due East, is say acting on a body of 1 kg lying at rest at the origin. ... In our example 5N is the magnitude of the force, but force is 5N due East. So magnitude alone is not force, it is magnitude plus a direction.

Answered by VaibhavVerma71
0

Answer:

The forum has greatness and direction. Suppose you were going 5 miles per hour. If this information is only given, it is called the magnitude of the height. So MAGNITUDE tells us how big a thing is. Values ​​that are completely defined in terms of size are called SCALAR. In our example above your travel at the rate of 5 km per hour is called speed. Since the speed is completely determined by the number and its units, it is a scale.

Then there is a quantity, which will be completely determined by the need without a directive again. In our example above, we can say that you are traveling five miles an hour in the right East. You now have a size (5 miles per hour), as well as a guide. Values ​​to be fully specified without limitation, a method is also called VIVA. The veteran in our example above is called velocity. So speed is a scale, speed is a barrier.

Power is digital. It has the size and size and direction. A force of 5 N (Newton, an Army unit) from the East, is said to be holding a 1 kg body lying in a resting place at the beginning. Under the action of a given force, the body will receive an acceleration of 5 m / s² East.

In our example the 5N is the maximum power, but the power is the East Coast proper. So size alone is not power, it's size and direction.

But when solving numbers, we usually deal with the plurality and add some later guidance. That saves you time. In our minds it is very clear how the doctors should be given.

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