Vectors and scalars
Scalar quantities
A physical quantity is something that can be measured. Scalar quantities only have a magnitudeThe size of a physical quantity. or size.
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Examples of scalar quantities
Some examples of scalar quantities include:
- temperature, eg 10 degrees Celsius (掳C)
- mass, eg 5 kilograms (kg)
- energy, eg 2,000 joules (J)
- distance, eg 19 metres (m)
- speed, eg 8 metres per second (m/s)
- density, eg 1,500 kilograms per metre cubed (kg/m鲁)
Vector quantities
Vector quantities have both magnitude and an associated direction. This makes them different from scalar quantities, which just have magnitude.
Examples of vector quantities
Some examples of vector quantities include:
- force, eg 20 newtons (N) to the left
- displacement, eg 50 kilometres (km) east
- velocity, eg 11 metres per second (m/s) upwards
- acceleration, eg 10 metres per second squared (m/s虏) downwards
- momentum, eg 250 kilogram metres per second (kg m/s) south west
The velocityThe speed of an object in a particular direction. of an object is its speed in a particular direction. Velocity is a vectorA measurement having size (magnitude) and direction, eg a displacement of 4 m North. quantity because it has both a magnitude and an associated direction. To calculate velocity, displacementQuantity describing the distance from the start of the journey to the end in a straight line with a described direction, eg 50 km due north of the original position. is used in calculations, rather than distance.
Unlike distance, which is a scalarA physical quantity that has magnitude (size) only. Eg energy, temperature, mass, distance. quantity, displacement is a vector quantity. It includes:
- the distance travelled, measured in a straight line from start to finish
- the direction of the straight line