The sum of 2 or more vectors is called the resultant vector. It is the single vector that represents the combined effect of all the individual vectors added together.
The magnitudes of two vectors are added when the vectors are parallel to each other. In this case, the magnitude of the sum is equal to the sum of the magnitudes of the two vectors.
The magnitudes of two vectors are added when calculating the resultant magnitude of their vector sum. This can be done using the Pythagorean theorem, where the magnitude of the resultant vector is the square root of the sum of the squares of the magnitudes of the individual vectors.
No, the magnitudes of the sum of two vectors are generally greater than or equal to the sum of the magnitudes of the individual vectors. The triangle inequality states that the sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle must be greater than the length of the remaining side, which applies to vector addition as well.
Adding two vectors results in a new vector that represents the combination of the two original vectors. The new vector is defined by finding the sum of the corresponding components of the two vectors.
The sum of 2 or more vectors is called the resultant vector. It is the single vector that represents the combined effect of all the individual vectors added together.
Sure, if the two vectors point in the same direction.When we need the sum of magnitudes of two vectors we simply add the magnitudes, but to get the magnitude of the sum of these two vectors we need to add the vectors geometrically.Formula to find magnitude of the sum of these two vectors is sqrt[ |A|2 +|B|2 +2*|A|*|B|*cos(z) ] where |A| and |B| are magnitudes of two A and B vectors, and z is the angle between the two vectors.Clearly, magnitude of sum of two vectors is less than sum of magnitudes(|A| + |B|) for all cases except when cos(z)=1(for which it becomes = |A| + |B| ). Cos(z)=1 when z=0, i.e. the vectors are in the same direction(angle between them is 0).Also if we consider addition of two null vectors then their sum is zero in both ways of addition.So, we get two caseswhen the two vectors are in same direction, andwhen the two vectors are null vectors.In all other cases sum of magnitudes is greater than magnitude of the sum of two vectors.
No, the sum of two vectors cannot be a scalar.
It is impossible if the two vectors are of unequal magnitude.
No two vectors of unequal magnitude cannot give the sum 0 because for 0 sum the 2 vectors must be equal and in opposite direction
Vectors that sum to zero are coplanar and coplanar vectors sum to zero.
No. Vectors add at rightangle bythe pythagoran theorem: resultant sum = square root of (vector 1 squared + vector 2 squared)
When the vectors are parallel, i.e. both have the same direction.
Not really. The sum of the magnitudes is a scalar, not a vector - so they can't be equal. But the sum of the two vectors can have the same magnitude, if both vectors point in the same direction.
The magnitudes of two vectors are added when the vectors are parallel to each other. In this case, the magnitude of the sum is equal to the sum of the magnitudes of the two vectors.
The magnitudes of two vectors are added when calculating the resultant magnitude of their vector sum. This can be done using the Pythagorean theorem, where the magnitude of the resultant vector is the square root of the sum of the squares of the magnitudes of the individual vectors.
No, the magnitudes of the sum of two vectors are generally greater than or equal to the sum of the magnitudes of the individual vectors. The triangle inequality states that the sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle must be greater than the length of the remaining side, which applies to vector addition as well.