QUESTION IMAGE
Question
answer the following.
- what is the only component of scalar quantities?
- give three examples of scalar quantities.
- what are the two components of vector quantities?
- draw the resultant vector when the two vectors below are added together.
- find the numerical value of the resultant vector in the diagram below.
- does the order in which the vectors are added together affect the value of the resultant vector? explain.
- give three examples of vector quantities.
Brief Explanations
- Scalar quantities have only magnitude as they are single - valued and direction - less.
- Common scalar quantities include temperature (e.g., 25°C), mass (e.g., 5 kg), and speed (e.g., 60 km/h).
- Vector quantities have magnitude (size) and direction (e.g., 10 m/s to the north).
- To draw the resultant vector when adding two vectors, use the head - to - tail method. Place the tail of the second vector at the head of the first vector, and then draw a vector from the tail of the first vector to the head of the second vector.
- For two perpendicular vectors of magnitudes 3m and 4m, use the Pythagorean theorem $R=\sqrt{a^{2}+b^{2}}$, where $a = 3m$ and $b = 4m$. So $R=\sqrt{3^{2}+4^{2}}=\sqrt{9 + 16}=\sqrt{25}=5m$.
- The order in which vectors are added does not affect the resultant vector because vector addition is commutative. Mathematically, $\vec{A}+\vec{B}=\vec{B}+\vec{A}$.
- Examples of vector quantities are displacement (e.g., 10 m east), velocity (e.g., 20 m/s at 30° north of east), and force (e.g., 50 N downward).
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- Magnitude
- Temperature, mass, speed
- Magnitude and direction
- Use head - to - tail method to draw
- 5m
- No, because vector addition is commutative.
- Displacement, velocity, force