Displacement is a vector quanity that measures the difference between final position and initial position.
Distance is a scalar quanity the measures the total length traveled.
For example, imagine you begin stationary at any location and walk along the outline of a 100ft circumference circle, returning you to your starting location. Your distance traveled will be 100 feet, your displacement will be 0 due to your initial position and final position being identical.
Well distance is the total lengh travelled but displacement is the distance from the starting point to the ending point(when you join the 2 points)
Look distance is the total length covered by a body and displacement is the shortest length covered by a body. Also displacement is a vector quantity (has both magnitude and direction) and distance is a scalar quantity (has only magnitude and no direction)
Displacement is measured in distance, so any measurement dealing with only distance will work. The SI units are meters.
The distance and displacement are the same when the displacement is parallel to itself or straight. Displacement is a vector and distance is a real number or scalar. If an object is displaced around a circle the displacement is zero and the distance is 2pi r.
Distance is the overall length of travel. If you traveled in a big L you distance is the length of both lines. Displacement is the length and direction you are from your starting point so in the instance of the big L, a connecting line that makes a triangle is your displacement. Another example is if you travel 5 ft to the left and then 5 ft to right, The distance you traveled is 10 ft, but your displacement is 0 because you ended back up where you started
distance is the measure of the length between two points where as displacement is the shortest distance between the points.
No, displacement is different from distance. Displacement takes into account both the distance and direction from the starting point to the ending point. So, to find displacement, you need information about both the distance traveled and the direction of travel.
Well distance is the total lengh travelled but displacement is the distance from the starting point to the ending point(when you join the 2 points)
Distance is nondirectional, such as ten feet, displacement is directional, such as ten feet east of my present position.
Displacement takes into account the direction of an object's final position from its initial position, while distance only considers the total length traveled by the object regardless of direction. Displacement is a vector quantity, whereas distance is a scalar quantity.
A good subject for an investigatory project in physics about displacement and distance could be examining how different surfaces affect the distance traveled by a rolling object. This project could involve measuring the displacement and distance covered by a rolling ball on surfaces with varying friction levels.
No, displacement and distance traveled are two different measurements. Distance traveled is the total length of the path taken, while displacement is the change in position from the starting point to the ending point, taking into account direction.
Yes, it is possible for displacement to be zero while distance is not. This can happen when an object moves in different directions and its total movement results in a non-zero distance, while the net change in position (displacement) from start to finish is zero.
Distance is scalar. Displacement is a vector.
No, distance and displacement are not always the same. Distance is the total length traveled regardless of direction, whereas displacement is the shortest path between the initial and final positions, taking into account direction. Thus, they could be different if the path taken is not a straight line.
Displacement is just distance traveled and a direction. For example 40m east is a displacement distance
Roller coasters often have loops and turns that make their final displacement different than their final distance. But, if the roller-coaster is a loop, the displacement will obviously be 0. If the displacement is not 0, it is measured in meters.