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To calculate the speed of the sailboat, you would use the formula: speed = distance/time. In this case, the distance is 150 meters and the time is 120 seconds. Plugging these values into the formula, you get: speed = 150 meters / 120 seconds = 1.25 meters per second. Therefore, the speed of the sailboat is 1.25 meters per second.
8.3 m/s
Its speed is exactly 100 meters per 120 seconds. That speed can also be expressed as . . . -- 5/6 meter per second -- 50 meters per minute -- 72 km per day -- 30 km per hour -- 504 km per week . . etc.
900 meters/30 seconds = 30 meters/second
9.804 meters per second.
To calculate the speed of the sailboat, you would use the formula: speed = distance/time. In this case, the distance is 150 meters and the time is 120 seconds. Plugging these values into the formula, you get: speed = 150 meters / 120 seconds = 1.25 meters per second. Therefore, the speed of the sailboat is 1.25 meters per second.
8.3 m/s
8.3 m/s
50 meters in 10 seconds is faster. you go 5 meters per second in 50 meters per second, and you go 6 meters a second in 5 seconds..
That's easy, if the car is initially traveling at 25 meters per second and gradually accelerates 3 meters per second for 6 seconds then the car is traveling at 43 meters per second.
It's a bad question because 5 meters per second per secondis not"a constant speed"it is a rate of acceleration.5 x 5 = 25 meters traveled.
s=d/ts= 100 / 12s= 8.33ms-1
No. If you divide a distance by a speed, you get a time, not a speed. For example, (meters) / (meters/second) = (seconds).
"Constant rate" implies there is no acceleration - acceleration is zero.
There is no "unit for constant speed".The SI unit for speed (just "speed") is meters per second. Constant speed means there is no acceleration; the unit for acceleration is meters per second squared.
A total of 30 seconds - assuming they run at a constant speed.
363m