Yes, but it is customary to express it as 2 seconds per foot. The denominator - or second measure - usually takes the value 1 in a unit rate.
There is no rate, but there is a fraction: 1/4
1 for 2 cans or 0.5 for 1 can.
Divide the number of miles by the number of hours to obtain the unit rate. You should get: 128 miles / 2 hours = 64 miles per hour
30 miles per hour.
2 pages per minutes
89 feet per second.
1 meter in 2 and 1/3 seconds
66 and 2/3 feet per second
The unit rate is 2.
A dot that moves over 43 feet in 1.5 seconds is moving at the rate of 43 feet per 1.5 seconds, or 28.666... (28 2/3) feet per second.
1 foot away
When rates are expressed as a quantity of 1, such as 2 feet per second or 5 miles per hour, they are called unit rates. If you have a multiple-unit rate such as 120 students for every 3 buses, and want to find the single-unit rate, write a ratio equal to the multiple-unit rate with 1 as the second term.
It is approx 40 minutes and 3 seconds. The rate of descent is 22.5 feet per minute!
To determine how long it takes the diver to reach -15.6 feet, we can use the formula: time = distance / rate. The diver descends from sea level (0 feet) to -15.6 feet, which is a distance of 15.6 feet. Given that the diver descends at a rate of 2.5 feet per second, we calculate the time as follows: time = 15.6 feet / 2.5 feet per second = 6.24 seconds. Therefore, it takes the diver approximately 6.24 seconds to reach -15.6 feet.
An object in free fall will fall approximately 64 feet in 2 seconds.
60.5
At 30 mph, an object travels about 102.66 feet in two seconds.