moatasim23
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How can we distinguish scalars from vectors?If we are given a certain physical quantity how can we justify whether it is scalar or vector?
rcremont said:The best example I've found useful is the difference between mass and weight. Mass has no directional value only a magnitude which is a scalar. Weight on the other hand has a magnitude as well as a direction (downward) which is a vector.
Actually they measure the mass not the weight. The fact that they probably measure it with a device that includes a force transducer is no more relevant than whether you measure a length with a wooden ruler or a laser device with a digital readout.the_emi_guy said:They measure the weight of my luggage at the airport because there is a 50lb limit (scalar).
I fly to Singapore (opposite side of the Earth). How much does my luggage weight now? Would you say that its weight is now negative?
AlephZero said:Actually they measure the mass not the weight...
the_emi_guy said:They are measuring weight. "If your bag exceeds weight or size limits, please ..."
Mass can be inferred from weight because we know what planet we are on.
jbriggs444 said:They are measuring mass.
the_emi_guy said:If this apparatus were measuring mass then I could transport it to the moon or deep space and it would give the same reading right?. Scales measure the magnitude of the gravitation force exerted on a body and display that result as a single number that we call weight.
jbriggs444 said:If this apparatus was based on a spring or a load cell and you transported it to the moon without re-calibrating it in its new place of usage, then it would give hugely erroneous results.
DrewD said:I don't think that a citation
"see sign at airport"
would be accepted in a paper and, while this is no peer-reviewed journal, I don't think it should be accepted here.
the_emi_guy said:Exactly my point. This is because it is not measuring mass, it is measuring weight.