No. This would be 60 kilometers in an hour.
1 kilometer per minute equates to 37.28 miles per hour.
3.73 mph or 6 km/h
No one can run a mile in a minute....
That depends on your speed. At 60 kph, it will take 1 minute.
in the literal sense, it takes one kilometer to run one kilometer. another way is the time varies for each individual. for they may have different fitness levels, making them go different speeds, and frequent to non frequent stops/breaks
1 kilometer per minute equates to 37.28 miles per hour.
No, the World Record is 2:11.96 - Noah Ngeny of Kenya (record set in 1999)
3.73 mph or 6 km/h
No one can run a mile in a minute....
A kilometer could be walked in 15 minutes.
A cheetah can run at speeds of 110 to 120 km per hour, but it only does this in short bursts of less than half a kilometer before it stops, and the usual distance is closer to one or two hundred meters. Running at such speed requires a lot of energy over a short period of time, and tires the animal out. After that, it rests for quite a while.
no
If there are 1000 meters in a kilometer and a runner travels 125 meters per minute, that would mean the runner could travel one kilometer in 8 minutes (1000 / 125 = 8). If the runner is going to run 10 kilometers it would take (10 * 8) or 80 minutes to finish the 10 kilometers.
A 10-minute time over a kilometer equates to a time of 16 minutes 5.6 seconds for 1.0 mile.
That depends on your speed. At 60 kph, it will take 1 minute.
in the literal sense, it takes one kilometer to run one kilometer. another way is the time varies for each individual. for they may have different fitness levels, making them go different speeds, and frequent to non frequent stops/breaks
The average human can run about 400 to 500 meters in one minute, depending on their fitness level and running experience. This translates to a pace of approximately 4 to 6 minutes per kilometer. However, this distance can vary significantly based on individual factors such as age, gender, and conditioning. Elite runners can cover much greater distances in the same timeframe, while beginners may run less.