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Figure 1. An example of what a vector can look like in a cartesian coordinate system.[1]
A vector is a mathematical tool used to represent physical quantities that require both a magnitude and direction to describe. Such physical quantities include things like positions, velocities and forces.
For example, the velocity of a baseball is a vector quantity: the moving baseball has both a magnitude and a direction.
- The magnitude of its velocity is known as the speed, so one would say the baseball's speed is 100 km/hr.
- The direction can be described in many ways (once a coordinate system is chosen): the baseball could be traveling "to the left", "to the west", "in the x-direction", etc.[2]
Figure 1 shows an example of a magnetic field vector on a cartesian plane.
To learn more about vectors, visit HyperPhysics.
For Further Reading
- Velocity
- Force
- Scalar
- Unit vector
- Or explore a random page
References
- ↑ Wikimedia Commons (2023). (Accessed June 9, 2026). Vector B [Online]. Available: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vector_B.svg
- ↑ R. Chabay and B. Sherwood, "Describing the 3D World: Vectors," in Matter & Interactions, 3rd ed., Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2011, ch.1, sec.5, pp. 9

