That totally depends on the power of the wind at that moment.
S-waves travel slower than P-waves, typically at about 60-70% of the speed of P-waves. If a P-wave takes 5 minutes to reach the seismic station, the S-wave would take approximately 8 to 10 minutes to cover the same distance, depending on the specific speeds of the waves in that region.
7,200
P waves arrive a couple seconds to a few minutes before s waves.
There are 30 minutes in .5 of an hour
2250 minutes and 350 seconds
2,628,000 minutes in 5 years.
there are 7200 minutes in 5 days
5 minutes.
Hz = cycles/second. Therefore, at 2Hz, you're generating two complete cycles (or what I believe you refer to as waves) every second. So 2 cycles x 60 seconds = 120 cycles per minute. 120 cycles x 5 minutes = 600 cycles.
5 hours and 55 minutes is equal to 355 minutes.
Primary waves (P-waves) are faster than secondary waves (S-waves). Therefore, if both waves start together and travel for 5 minutes, the primary wave will travel farther than the secondary wave. This difference in speed is due to the fact that P-waves are compressional waves that can move through solids, liquids, and gases, while S-waves are shear waves that only propagate through solids.
1 hour = 60 minutes so 5 hours and 38 minutes = 5*60 + 38 minutes = 338 minutes.