Well assuming that everytime around the track is 1/4 a mile. You would have to run a lap in 2.5 minutes to make That 60 minute deadline. ( 4*6=24/60=2.5 )
2 miles in 16 minutes = 7.5 miles per hour This is roughly equal to running 8 times around an outdoor track and doing each lap in 2 minutes.
Ten laps = 10*.25 = 2.5 miles. 2.5 miles in 15 minutes = 2.5/15 miles per minute = 60*2.5/15 or 10 miles per hour.
To calculate the number of laps in 2 miles, you need to know the length of the track. For example, if the track is a standard 400 meters, then 1 mile is equivalent to 4 laps. Therefore, 2 miles would be 8 laps around a 400-meter track.
Take the amount of time that the track was traveled in and divide 60 by it. If it takes 6 minutes, that's 10 miles/hr.
The car's average speed is 75 miles per hour.
2 miles in 16 minutes = 7.5 miles per hour This is roughly equal to running 8 times around an outdoor track and doing each lap in 2 minutes.
It would take the team three hours to run 20 miles.
The two ends of the Kokoda Trail are at Kokoda and Owers Corner sixty miles apart.
Around 12000 miles
43.5 miles
We actually drove around the rose bowl and used the car to track the miles, which was about 3.2 miles. If you're running the track, then it's almost exactly 3 miles.
Ten laps = 10*.25 = 2.5 miles. 2.5 miles in 15 minutes = 2.5/15 miles per minute = 60*2.5/15 or 10 miles per hour.
0 (apex)
Mike's average velocity was 4 miles per hour when he ran ten laps around the school's one-fourth mile track in 15 minutes. This is calculated by first finding the total distance he covered (10 laps * 0.25 miles per lap = 2.5 miles) and then dividing it by the total time taken (15 minutes = 0.25 hours).
5/14 miles=0.357 miles=0.575 km
depends on the size of the track
You say the track is 400m, then ask how far you have run after 18 laps. Your distance is 2 miles. Your average speed is 9min per mile. apex- 0