Three hundred metres.
1 kilometre = 1000 metres.
There are 1000 metres in one kilometre so there must be 500 metres in half a kilometre.
There are 1000 metres in 1 kilometre
150 cm is 3/2000 of a kilometre.
It is 7/10.
0.3
A kilometre is 100,000 centimetres long. A square kilometre is one kilometre long and one kilometre wide. A square centimetre is one centimetre long and one centimetre wide. If you filled up a kilometre-sized square (a square kilometre) with centimetre-sized squares (square centimetres) you would need 100,000 rows of 100,000 square centimetres, which comes to 10^10, or 10,000,000,000 (10 billion) square centimetres.
There are 1000 metres in one kilometre. Therefore, 700 metres is equal to 700/1000 kilometres. Expressed as a vulgar fraction in its simplest form, this is equal to 7/10, or seven tenths, of a kilometre.
It is 1/10.
Yes, km is a kilometre, dm is a decimetre or 10 centimetres. 1 kilometre is 10,000 decimetres, so a kilometre is much bigger.
There are 1000 metres in one kilometre. There are 100 metres in one hectometre. Therefore, one kilometre is equal to 1000/100 = 10 hectometres.
There are 10 metres in one decametre. There are 1000 metres in one kilometre. Therefore, 1 kilometre is equal to 1000/10 = 100 decametres.
There are 10 hectometres in one kilometre. Therefore, 10 kilometres is equal to 10 x 10 = 100 hectometres.
1 kilometre.
The 12 cross country skiing events in the 2006 Winter Olympics were15 kilometre classical - men30 kilometre pursuit - men50 kilometre freestyle - men4 x 10 kilometre relay - menSprint - menTeam sprint - men10 kilometre classical - women15 kilometre pursuit - women30 kilometre freestyle - women4 x 5 kilometre relay - womenSprint - womenTeam Sprint - women
One decametre is equal to 10 metres. One kilometre is equal to 1000 metres. Therefore, one kilometre is equal to 1000/10 = 100 decametres.