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    • https://phys.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/College_Physics/College_Physics_1e_(OpenStax)/03%3A_Two-Dimensional_Kinematics/3.05%3A_Addition_of_Velocities
      Velocities in two dimensions are added using the same analytical vector techniques. Relative velocity is the velocity of an object as observed from a particular reference frame, and it varies dramati...Velocities in two dimensions are added using the same analytical vector techniques. Relative velocity is the velocity of an object as observed from a particular reference frame, and it varies dramatically with reference frame. Relativity is the study of how different observers measure the same phenomenon, particularly when the observers move relative to one another. Classical relativity is limited to situations where speed is less than about 1% of the speed of light (3000 km/s).
    • https://phys.libretexts.org/Courses/Tuskegee_University/Algebra_Based_Physics_I/03%3A_Two-Dimensional_Kinematics/3.06%3A_Addition_of_Velocities
      Velocities in two dimensions are added using the same analytical vector techniques. Relative velocity is the velocity of an object as observed from a particular reference frame, and it varies dramati...Velocities in two dimensions are added using the same analytical vector techniques. Relative velocity is the velocity of an object as observed from a particular reference frame, and it varies dramatically with reference frame. Relativity is the study of how different observers measure the same phenomenon, particularly when the observers move relative to one another. Classical relativity is limited to situations where speed is less than about 1% of the speed of light (3000 km/s).

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