The easiest way is to convert Miles per Hour to Feet per second. I have the following relationship memorized: 60 MPH = 88 Feet/sec.
(35 MPH)/(60 MPH)*(88 Ft/sec) = 51 1/3 Ft/sec. So multiply by 1 sec. and you have 51 1/3 Ft, or 51 feet and 4 inches.
"Unavailable for doing work" is related to the Second Law of Thermodynamics.
-Light travels at 299,792,458 meters per second.-There is 31,556,926 seconds in one year.-Light travels 9,460,528,412,464,108 meters in one year and after doing the math, light travels 9,460,528,412,464.108 kilometers in one year.
That would depend on who is doing the counting. A NASA flight managerwaiting for the ship to arrive would count a different length of time comparedto a passenger on the spacecraft.
At 200 miles per hour you are traveling 293.3 feet per second.
Do not operate hazardous machinery or drive a vehicle while doing this.
A barrel roll.
40 x 5280/3600 feet...
Although it's pretty much impossible to travel at 6 miles per second, if you were doing so, you would travel a total of 6 x 1609.344 x 180 = 579363.84 metres.
I am in Nairobi and would wish to travel there by road to see a friend in the institution who is doing Science. What is the answer?
No you don't have to be small to do anything at gymnastics you just have to go confidently and do whatever it is you're trying to do
Usually, they do not have to tell you what they are about to do to your vehicle. But, the procedure is is that they will sell your vehicle in an auction.
A vehicle travels approximately 1.5 ft per second for each mile per hour. 25 x 1.5 = 37.5. Add to that the average human response time to react to stimuli and apply the brake (1.5 sec again) = 56.25 ft before the vehicle begins to stop. Braking on most decent surfaces with good tires slows you 15 feet per second, per second of braking.37.5 fps to 0 fps = 2.5 sec to stop(37.5 fps/2) x 2.5 sec = 46.875 ft braking distance + 56.25 reaction distance= 103.125 ft between recognition of a danger and your vehicle stopping.Add to that the braking efficiency of the vehicle. You can also account for the drag coefficient of the pavement and grade (.7 to .8) but that is usually a negligible amount unless you are doing serious traffic crash reconstructions.
If you hit another vehicle then you are at fault. It does not matter what you were doing at the time.
Moving a force through a distance.
It means mps2 .How fast you travel (i.e. your speed) is writen as metres per second (m/s) : e.g. 1 m/s means that in one second you travel 1 metre.However, acceleration is different to speed. It measuring the change in speed per second. Basically it's metres per second divided by seconds.It means the change in acceleration metres per second per second.e.g. If you go from doing 30mps to doing 31mps and it only takes a second for you to do do that, then you've accelerated at 1m/s/s or 1ms2. If it takes you 2 seconds to go from doing 30m/s to 31 m/s then clearly you're acceleration is 0.5 m/s/s (0.5m/s2)
It depends what speed you are going at... say if you were going at 60 miles an hour, you would travel 950 miles. However if you were doing 30mph you would travel 475 miles. Remember to work out the distance you do the speed times the time it takes. Or if you want to work out the speed you do the distance divided by the time. Hope this helps! From Italic97
No. Speed is how fast an object can travel from one distance to another. Agility is how quick something can move. Think of it like this. A track runner doing the 1000m dash is an example of speed or how fast someone can travel from one place to another. A gymnast doing the floor exercise is an example of Agility or how well and quick someone can move.