When are the magnitudes of $\vec{A} + \vec{B}$ and $\vec{A} - \vec{B}$ equal?

  • A
    When $\vec{A}$ and $\vec{B}$ are parallel.
  • B
    When $\vec{A}$ and $\vec{B}$ are perpendicular.
  • C
    When $\vec{A}$ and $\vec{B}$ are anti-parallel.
  • D
    When the magnitude of $\vec{A}$ is zero.

Explore More

Similar Questions

$A$ particle moves $21 \ m$ along the direction of the vector $6\hat{i} + 2\hat{j} + 3\hat{k}$,then it moves $14 \ m$ along the direction of the vector $3\hat{i} - 2\hat{j} + 6\hat{k}$. What is its total displacement (in meters)?

There are five vectors,each of magnitude $8$ units. These vectors form a regular pentagon as shown in the figure. Find the magnitude of the resultant vector.

The angle $\beta$ between vector $\overrightarrow{A}$ and the resultant vector $(\overrightarrow{A}-\overrightarrow{B})$ is given by:

If the magnitude of the sum of two vectors is equal to the magnitude of the difference of the two vectors,the angle between these vectors is ........ $^o$.

In the diagram shown in the figure,which of the following relations is correct?

Vedclass Products

For Students

Vedclass Test Series

Mock tests in real JEE/NEET style with performance analysis. 5-day free trial.

Start Free Trial
For Teachers

Exam Paper Generator

Generate Set A/B/C/D exam papers from 7.5L+ questions in 2 minutes. 3 chapters free.

Try Free
For Institutes

Online Exam Module

Live online exams with unlimited students, 360° analytics & white-label branding.

See Demo