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The velocity is zero because the total displacement vector is zero.

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Q: What is the velocity if you travel in 10 mile circle at 15 mph and end up where you started?
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What is the velocity if you travel in a 10-mile circle at 14 mph and end up where you started?

This question doesn't read as if it's the velocity you are trying to calculate. Velocity is rate of change of displacement in a specified direction. The velocity is constantly changing when travelling in a circle. It's 14 mph along the tangent to the circle at the point where you are.


What is the velocity if you travel in a 10 mile circle at 15 mph and end up where you started?

It would take 40 mins, but you've already said the velocity is 15 mph.wrong dork its zero


What is her velocity if it takes her 60 seconds?

Takes her 60 seconds to do what? Travel 1 mile? Travel 10 miles?


What is the travel velocity for 19.5 hours of a 890 mile trip?

If, and only if the trip was in a straight line, the velocity is 45.6 miles per hour approx.


What is the circumference of a 21-mile circle?

The circumference of a circle with a 21 mile diameter is 66 miles (approx).


If you walked one mile south one mile west and then one mile north and ended up where you started where would be you?

One answer is the equator. It is true to say that you end up on the equator again if you started there. You actually would be on the equator, but you would be 1 mile west of your origonal location on the equator. You ended up where you started - sorta. There are other ideas, however. Let's look. There are two correct answers. One is the North Pole. "North and South" are not "up and down," it is moving toward the respective pole. Therefore, traveling one mile south of the North Pole, traveling any distance west or east, then one mile north, would put you back at the North Pole. The other, less common answer, is that there are an infinite number of places on the Earth, where you would end up at the starting location if you were to travel one mile south, west, then north. And that is anywhere 1.159 miles north of the South Pole. You would travel south for one mile, putting you at .159 miles north of the South Pole. Then traveling one mile west would cause you to make a complete circle around the South Pole, ending where the westward mile started. Then travel one mile north and that would put you back at your original starting point.


How long does it take for Pluto to travel 1 mile?

Pluto's mean orbital velocity is listed as 2.93 miles per second.So on the average over its whole orbit, it takes (1/2.93) = 0.3413 seconds to travel 1 mile. (rounded)


Mike ran ten laps around his schools 14 mile track in 15 minutes. What was his average velocity in miles per hour?

His velocity was zero - since he's back to where he started. (Try to substitute speed where appropriate.)


Mike ran ten laps around his schools 14 mile track in 15 minutes what was his averag velocity in miles per hour?

His velocity was zero - since he's back to where he started. (Try to substitute speed where appropriate.)


Mike ran ten laps around his school's 14 mile track in 15 minutes. What was his average velocity in miles per hour?

His velocity was zero - since he's back to where he started. (Try to substitute speed where appropriate.)


If you walked one mile south one mile westand then one mile northand ended up where you started where would you be?

There are an infinite number of places you could be. The usual answer to this question is that you are at the North Pole. When you walk south you are one mile away from the pole. Then when you walk west you are walking in an arc around the pole. Then when you walk north you are back at the North Pole. However, you could also be in a number of places near the South Pole. From the North Pole answer we see that when we walk west that we are walking in an arc relative to the pole. If we continue to walk west, we will eventually end up back at place where we started walking west, after we have walked a complete circle. Now consider that near the South Pole we can trace a circle that has a circumference of 1 mile. Once you have defined that circle, then we can start our journey at any of the "infinite" points that are 1 mile north of that circle. In this case we would walk south 1 mile, then walk west one mile, exactly circling the South Pole, and finally walk north 1 mile, returning to where we started. A: Milton Keynes - it happened to me once!


Square mile to mile radius?

A circle with a mile radius has an area of pi sq miles.