GEOMETRY:
On a spheroid, which is where degrees, minutes, and seconds can be used for measurement of distance or position, the answer depends on the orientation of the line segment and possibly the latitude of the start and end points (if the line segment is not precisely north-south).
In two-dimensional geometry, such as a line on paper, the term "minutes" has no meaning in terms of measurement.
TRAVEL TIME:
The answer depends on your speed. At 60 MPH, there are ten minutes in ten miles.
1 mile. 6 miles per 60 minutes = 1 mile per ten minutes.
You would run 4.17 miles in 10 minutes.
About ten minutes
Five kilometers is equivalent to approximately 3.1 miles. An average time for an novice athlete to run a 5k would be thirty minutes (approximately ten minutes per mile).
You are going one mile per minute at that rate.
I can cycle about 2 miles.
Oh, dude, in ten minutes, you can drive as many miles as your car can handle! Like, if you're cruising at 60 miles per hour, you can cover a cool 10 miles in that time. But hey, if you're stuck in traffic, you might not even make it a mile. So, it really depends on how fast you're going and how lucky you are with those green lights!
Between ten and eleven miles, or about 20 minutes.
1 mile. 6 miles per 60 minutes = 1 mile per ten minutes.
Lots of variables, but easily 100 miles or so at top speeds.
If my calculations are right you need to travel 20 miles per hour to reach ten miles in thirty minutes.
33.333 miles.
60 mph
You would run 4.17 miles in 10 minutes.
540 miles per hour
ten minutes
About ten minutes