20 miles per hour north is an example of
Convert them all to the same per x hours and then compare them. You can either convert them all to unit rates (x = 1) or some other rate (eg lcm of 16, 50, 15 and 20). I'll use unit rates: 800 miles per 16 hours = 800 ÷ 16 miles per 16 × 16 hours = 50 mph 1500 miles per 50 hours = 1500 ÷ 50 miles per 50 ÷ 50 hours = 30 mph 600 miles per 15 hours = 600 ÷ 15 miles per 15 ÷ 15 hours = 40 mph 900 miles per 20 hours = 900 ÷ 20 miles per 20 ÷ 20 hours = 45 mph 50 mph is the greatest unit rate → 800 miles per 16 hours is the greatest rate. --------------- The rates can be ordered: 50 > 45 > 40 > 30 → 800 miles per 16 hours > 900 miles per 20 hours > 600 miles per 15 hours > 1500 miles per 50 hours.
20 miles per hour.
20/5 = 4 miles per hour
If a car travels for 20 minutes at a speed of 60 miles per hour the car travels 20 miles.
You are traveling at 15 miles per hour.
This measure is an example of velocity, which includes both a speed and a direction.
A vector. This is because the quantity given has a magnitude (20mph) and a direction (North). It is also an example of a velocity.
A velocity vector includes both speed and direction.
Speed.
Velocity.
a ratio
20 miles per hour
Velocity is a speed with a direction (e.g. 20 miles per hour North). your example is an average velocity. velocity is displacement over elapsed time. it is speed. i know this and im only 11
359 miles if you take the I-20 East per Google Maps 370 miles if you take the I-85 North per Google Maps 385 miles if you take the I-26 East per Google Maps
1360 miles at 20 miles per gallon = 1360/20 = 168 gallons of gas
20
To solve this problem divide 930 by the number of miles per gallon your car gets. For example, if your car gets 20 miles per gallon, then it would take 930 divided by 20 = 46.5 gallons of gas .