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A vector in physics and engineering typically refers to a quantity that has close relationship to the spatial coordinates, informally described as an object with a "magnitude" and a "direction". The word vector is also now used for more general concepts (see also vector and generalizations below), but in this article we describe the original spatial meaning except where otherwise noted.

A common example of a vector is force — it has a magnitude and an orientation in three dimensions (or however many spatial dimensions one has), and multiple forces sum according to the parallegram law.

A vector can be formally defined by its relationship to the spatial coordinate system under rotations. Alternatively, it can be defined in a coordinate-free fashion via a tangent space of a three-dimensional manifold in the language of differential geometry. These definitions are discussed in more detail below.

A spatial vector is a special case of a tensor and is also analogous to a four-vector in relativity (and is sometimes therefore called a three-vector in reference to the three spatial dimensions, although this term also has another meaning for p-vectors of differential geometry). Vectors are the building blocks of vector fields and vector calculus.

1 Definitions

Informally, a vector is a quantity characterized by a number (indicating magnitude) and a direction, often represented graphically by an arrow. Examples are "moving north at 90 km/h" or "pulling towards the center of Earth with a force of 70 newtonThis article is about the SI unit of force. For other uses see Newton (disambiguation In physics, the newton (symbol: N) is the SI unit of force, named after Sir Isaac Newton in recognition of his work on classical mechanics. It was adopted by the Generals".

The notion of having a "magnitude" and "direction" is formalized by saying that the vector has components that transform like the coordinates under rotations. That is, if the coordinate system undergoes a rotation described by a rotation matrix R, so that a coordinate vector x is transformed to x' = Rx, then any other vector v is similarly transformed via v' = Rv. More generally, a vector is a tensor of contravariant rank one. In differential geometry, the term vector usually refers to quantities that are closely related to tangent spaces of a differentiable manifold (assumed to be three-dimensional and equipped with a positive definiteLet K be the field R or C V is a vector space over K and B : V × V → K is a bilinear map which is Hermitian in the sense that B ''x ''y is always the complex conjugate of B ''y ''x . Then B is positive-definite if B ''x ''x > 0 for every nonzero x in Riemannian metric). (A four-vector is a related concept when dealing with a 4 dimensional spacetimeIn special relativity and general relativity, time and three-dimensional space are treated together as a single four-dimensional manifold called spacetime . A point in spacetime may be referred to as an event . Each event has four coordinates t x y z ; or manifold in relativity.)

Examples of vectors include displacement, velocity, electric field, momentum, force, and acceleration.

Vectors can be contrasted with scalar quantities such as distance, speed, energy, time, temperature, charge, power, work, and mass, which have magnitude, but no direction (they are invariant under coordinate rotations). The magnitude of any vector is a scalar.

A related concept is that of a pseudovector (or axial vector). This is a quantity that transforms like a vector under proper rotations, but gains an additional sign flip under improper rotations. Examples of pseudovectors include magnetic field, torque, and angular momentum. (This distinction between vectors and pseudovectors is often ignored, but it becomes important in studying symmetry properties.) To distinguish from pseudo/axial vectors, an ordinary vector is sometimes called a polar vector.

Sometimes, one speaks informally of bound or fixed vectors, which are vectors additionally characterized by a "base point". Most often, this term is used for position vectors (relative to an origin point). More generally, however, the physical interpretation of a particular vector can be parameterized by any number of quantities.



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