height tailwinds or headwinds.
Assuming the runner maintains his average speed for an hour, 3 kilometres in 30 minutes is equal to 6 kilometres per hour.
No, usually they conserve for the home stretch.
Distance and time do not, in general, affect the speed. Speed, however, can affect distance or time. Distance is directly proportional to speed, time is inversely proportional.
The equation would be 2x+2(x+2)=28 when x= the speed of the slower runner. If you solve for x you get 6, which is the speed of the slower runner. Then if you add 2 you get the speed of the faster runner-8
3 km in 5 min => his average speed is 36 km in 60 min, that is 36 km per hour. Clearly an extremely fast runner and way faster than MY average speed.
Yes. By Josh L
The most logical variables are probably stance and how good you warmup
The terrain, weather, if they are mentally prepared,
The terrain, weather, if they are mentally prepared,
wind,runningblocks,proctice,naturalability
The terrain, weather, if they are mentally prepared,
The terrain, weather, if they are mentally prepared,
wind,runningblocks,proctice,naturalability
wind,runningblocks,proctice,naturalability
could be because of the weather, mood of the runner, sleep, or the food they ate that day
Depends. Is it a distance run? Or a fast run? If it is distance, the stamina runner would win. If it was a track, then the speed runner would win.
their speed