None.
A centimetre is a measure of length or distance in 1-dimensional space while a minute is a measure of angular displacement or of time. In either case, the two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
2 (meters/minute) x 100 (centimeters/meter) x 60 (minutes/hour) = (2 x 100 x 60) (meter - centimeter - minute / minute - meter - hour) = 12,000 centimeters / hour
15.6 meters per minute.
Conversion: cm per second x 1.969 = feet per minute
There is 15 centimeters in 15 centimeters
There are 10 centimeters in 10 centimeters.
20 cubic centimeters per minute equates to 1.22 cubic inches per minute.
At 40 centimeters per second, you are traveling 24 meters per minute.
To convert meters per minute to centimeters per second, divide by 60 since there are 60 seconds in a minute. So, an ant crawling at 12 meters per minute would be moving at 20 centimeters per second (12 meters/minute * 100 centimeters/meter / 60 seconds/minute).
2 (meters/minute) x 100 (centimeters/meter) x 60 (minutes/hour) = (2 x 100 x 60) (meter - centimeter - minute / minute - meter - hour) = 12,000 centimeters / hour
The unit of a caterpillar's speed would be centimeters per minute. This means that the caterpillar travels a certain number of centimeters in one minute.
The speed of light is approximately 18,000,000,000 centimeters per minute.
Oh, dude, let me break out my trusty calculator for this riveting math problem. So, 18 meters per minute is like 1800 centimeters per minute because there are 100 centimeters in a meter, right? And since there are 60 seconds in a minute, that's like 30 centimeters per second. So, 18 meters per minute equals 30 centimeters per second. Math is fun, right?
Centimeters per second x 0.6 = meters per minute
12 centimeters per minute
425 centimeters per hour equals 2.8 (2.78871391) inches per minute.
Normal snails can travel three millimeters to three centimeters per minute 20 cm to 200 centimeters per minute. It depends a lot on the size of the snail.
24km per hour 400m per minute 666.66 (repeater) centimeters per second