\name{quiver} \alias{quiver} \title{ Quiver or Velocity Plot } \description{ A quiver plot displays velocity vectors as arrows with components \code{(u,v)} at the points \code{(x,y)}. } \usage{ quiver(x, y, u, v, scale = 0.05, angle = 10, length = 0.1, ...) } \arguments{ \item{x, y}{x,y-coordinates of start points of the arrows.} \item{u, v}{x,y-coordinates of start points.} \item{scale}{scales the length of the arrows.} \item{angle}{angle between shaft and edge of the arrows.} \item{length}{length of the arrow edges.} \item{...}{more options presented to the \code{arrows} primitive.} } \details{ The matrices \code{x, y, u, v} must all be the same size and contain corresponding position and velocity components. However, x and y can also be vectors. } \value{ Opens a graph window and plots the velocity vectors. } \seealso{ \code{\link{vectorfield}}, \code{\link{arrows}} } \keyword{ graphs }