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I personally use the metric system where I live and 1 kilometer = 1000 meters so I suppose if a kilo mile is a measure of distance it would be 1000 miles.
If the slope-intercept equation is in the form: y = mx + b then the y-coordinate of the intercept is b
Please use the equation: distance = time x speed
In the case that you are using Slope-Intercept Form, no, you only plot two points: the y-intercept and one other point. If you don't use Slope-Intercept Form, then you have to use three points.
When discussing Lee's Macroscopic Propagation Model, all of the parameters of the model are specified relative to standard configuration of the transmitter and receiver. 1 mile is the reference distance specified in the table defining the reference parameters to be used. IF any of the parameters differ from the reference parameters, corrections must me made.
meter
yeah... they have to measure the distance for a mile
If you mean for speed of a marine vessel it is because a nautical mile and a land mile are not the same distance.
Mile or kilometer mile or kilometer.
You cannot.
That would be the nautical mile. It is 2000 yards long.
If the slope-intercept equation is in the form: y = mx + b then the y-coordinate of the intercept is b
I personally use the metric system where I live and 1 kilometer = 1000 meters so I suppose if a kilo mile is a measure of distance it would be 1000 miles.
Seconds is a unit of time, mile is a unit of length; you can't convert one to the other. To solve speed problems, use the formula distance = speed x time. Solving for time: time = distance / speed.
The distance between the above two places is 2461 miles. Mile is the best unit. The above distance is the straight line distance
The small box was 10 kilometers widea kilometre is not as long as a mile