The fastest recorded shuttlecock speed in flight is around 332 km/h (206 mph). This speed is often achieved by professional Badminton players during powerful smashes.
Factors that affect a shuttlecock include the type of feathers used, the speed and angle of the shuttlecock when hit, altitude and air humidity, and the quality of manufacturing. Additionally, external factors such as wind conditions and temperature can also impact the flight of a shuttlecock.
The speed of sound is fastest in solids, such as in metals like iron. In gases, the speed of sound is slower compared to solids.
The speed of light is fastest in a vacuum. All other media slow the speed of light down, albeit very slightly.
No!...Speed of light is the fastest speed possible, but now a new particle called lepton is more faster than light...rather it is has the fastest speed discovered till now.It travels in the same wave as light travels i.e tranverse waves.
My family has not experienced any hurricanes, and therefore no one has achieved a fastest wind speed related to hurricanes.
78mph according to the manufacturer of Wilson pro-type shuttles.
Factors that affect a shuttlecock include the type of feathers used, the speed and angle of the shuttlecock when hit, altitude and air humidity, and the quality of manufacturing. Additionally, external factors such as wind conditions and temperature can also impact the flight of a shuttlecock.
200mph
Smash and grip or overhead
Known as the muzzle velocity, it is the fastest speed the bullet will have in flight.
The speed of a shuttlecock to be used is be dependent on the playing conditions (i.e. temperature) and not on the skill level of player. In colder conditions, a shuttlecock with higher speed should be used and vice versa.
250
It was completed by Joe Kittinger and the speed was 714 miles per hour
The fastest flight ever 2,193 miles per hour.
it goes 10-15 mph.
it goes 10-15 mph.
Felix Baumgartner holds the record for the fastest flight of a human being without an aircraft. In a free fall dive from about 128,000 feet in 2012, he reached a speed of 833.9 miles per hour. That is almost 100 miles per hour faster than the speed of sound.