| 1.1 Scalars and Vectors in One Dimension |
|---|
Key Definition Every physical quantity in AP Physics is either a scalar (described by magnitude alone) or a vector (described by both magnitude and direction).
Scalars
- Distance
- Speed
- Mass
- Time
Vectors
- Position
- Displacement
- Velocity
- Acceleration
- Force
Vectors are represented as arrows whose length is proportional to magnitude and whose orientation shows direction. In one dimension, the sign of a component fully describes its direction, so arrow notation above the symbol is not required for components along an axis.
Adding vectors in one dimension
- Choose a positive direction along the axis.
- Assign each vector a signed component according to that chosen direction.
- Sum the components algebraically to find the resultant.
A positive result points in the chosen positive direction; a negative result points in the opposite direction. This sign-based addition method underpins every one-dimensional problem in the course — from net force to net displacement to total momentum. Keeping the scalar–vector distinction sharp prevents errors that cost credit on both multiple-choice and free-response questions throughout the entire AP exam.
At a Glance
| Quantity Type | Described by | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Scalar | Magnitude alone | Distance, speed, mass, and time |
| Vector | Both magnitude and direction | Position, displacement, velocity, acceleration, and force |