No, not if you are walking!
Speed = Distance/Time = 5 metres per second
(1,000 meters/20 minutes) x (1 minute/60 seconds) = 5/6 meter per second
The SI derived unit for speed is meter per second, m/s. The English standard unit for speed is feet per second, ft/s.
Linear speed cannot be converted to rotational speed without knowledge about the distance from the axis of rotation.
30 mph = 13.41 meter/sec 60 mph = 26.82 meter/sec 100 kph = 27.78 meter/sec
There is no speed for a meter per second, because that is a measure of speed itself. A meter per second (m/s) is a measure of speed, just like, say, miles per hour. Calculating speed is putting the distance (m) over time (s) and dividing. In dividing these numbers, you get a unit of speed, in this case, meters per second. A meter per second hasa speed of ONE meter per second.It's sort of like you're asking how many grams a gram weighs.A meter per second is a good walking speed. It is the same as 60 meters per minute, 3600 meters in 60 minutes, or 3.6 kilometers per hour.
The time does it take a bicycle to travel 2013 meter if it goes a speed of 108 meter per second is 18.63888888888889 seconds.
It really varies based on walking speed
speed = distance/time
The SI unit for speed is the same as the SI unit for velocity, which is meter per second, or m/s for short.Meter/ sec
No, not if you are walking!
The average walking speed of a person is around 1.4 to 1.6 meters per second. This speed can vary based on factors like age, fitness level, and terrain.
Sure. That's a perfectly good unit of momentum. So is (any unit of mass) divided by (any unit of speed).
5 meter per second
First, calculate the centripetal acceleration, as speed squared divided by radius.Then you can use Newton's Second Law to calculate the corresponding force.
so you calculate for one second howmuch meters do you pass and the number that you had is your speed on meters per second