An example of a scalar quantity is
temperature: the temperature at a given point is a single number. Velocity, on the other hand, is a vector quantity. Other examples of scalar quantities are
mass,
charge,
volume,
time,
speed,
pressure, and
electric potential at a point inside a medium. The
distance between two points in three-dimensional space is a scalar, but the
direction from one of those points to the other is not, since describing a direction requires two physical quantities such as the angle on the horizontal plane and the angle away from that plane.
Force cannot be described using a scalar, since force has both direction and
magnitude; however, the magnitude of a force alone can be described with a scalar, for instance the
gravitational force acting on a particle is not a scalar, but its magnitude is. The speed of an object is a scalar (e.g., 180 km/h), while its
velocity is not (e.g. a velocity of 180 km/h in a roughly northwest direction might consist of 108 km/h northward and 144 km/h westward). Some other examples of scalar quantities in Newtonian mechanics are
electric charge and
charge density. ==Relativistic scalars==