A unit rate is a comparison of two different quantities where one of the quantities is expressed per one unit of the other. For example, if a car travels 300 miles in 5 hours, the unit rate would be 60 miles per hour, meaning the car travels 60 miles for every 1 hour. Essentially, the denominator is 1 unit, allowing for easy interpretation of the rate.
5 hours.
26 miles over 1 gallon, although 1 cup over three scoops is also a contender.
Non-examples of unit rates include scenarios where the quantities being compared do not have a consistent ratio per single unit. For instance, if a car travels 300 miles in 5 hours, the average speed is not a unit rate unless expressed as miles per hour. Similarly, if a recipe calls for 3 cups of flour to make 12 cookies, the ratio is not a unit rate because it doesn't represent a single unit comparison, such as cups of flour per cookie.
300 seconds / 5 minutes = 300/5 = 60 seconds per minute.
300 Miles = 482.80 KM482.80/596.56 KMPH59.99 Miles per hour
a bus travels 300 miles in 6 hours
A rate is a ratio that compares two different units. ex: 300 miles\ 6 hours. you can't convert miles into hours. A unit rate is a rate comparing a number to 1 unit to another. ex: 50 miles\1 hour A unit rate always has 1 as a denominator.
300 miles per hour ==> 1 mile every 12 seconds
5 hours.
26 miles over 1 gallon, although 1 cup over three scoops is also a contender.
Distance = Rate * Time or, for our purposes algebraically manipulated to, Time = Distance/Rate Time = 300 miles/85 miles per hour = 3.5 hours ( three and one half hours ) ---------------------------------------------------
speed = distance/time 300/6 = 50 miles per hour
No. The denominator must be 1 for a unit rate. UNIT means ONE.
75 to 1
300 miles at 90 mph is 3 hours 20 minutes.
It takes 300/6 = 5 hours.