Miles per hour
Kilometer per hour
Ft per sec
3 X 3 X 2 = 18 cubic units.
Acceleration = change in speed/time = (20-5)/3 = 15/3 = 5 units of speed per second. It is not possible to be any more precise because the unit of speed (kilometres per hour, miles per hour, metres per second) is unspecified.
You can't convert between units that measure completely different things. If this is a speed problem, as is most likely, you have to decide how fast you will travel, then use the formula:distance = speed x time
What is the units digit of the least whole number greater than 1000 whose digits are all different?
3.5 units, or 3 units (to be pedantic).
No. Speed, time, and energy are three quite different units.No. Speed, time, and energy are three quite different units.No. Speed, time, and energy are three quite different units.No. Speed, time, and energy are three quite different units.
epic fail man
what are the four units of speed
Variable speed drivers are necessary to be able to have different speed settings in a motor.
You can not convert between units of time and units of length - they measure completely different things. If it is a speed problem, you must know ore assume the speed, then divide the number of miles by the speed.
I am not at all sure what you mean; you might use four different speed units for example.
speed = distance/time = 3/2.4 = 1.25 distance units/second
the units for rotational speed are radians / sec or degrees / sec
because they measure different aspects of the same thing, velocity also has direction but speed lacks direction. otherwise they are the same.
That depends on what you're trying to measure. Volume, weight, speed, etc. all have different units of measurement.
Thee different rectangles with an area of 12 square units are 3 by 4, 2 by 6 and 1 by 12.
I have no idea what you mean with "functional unit". The SI has units to measure lots of different things; basically there are seven base units (such as the meter, the second, and the kilogram), and several dozen derived units, i.e., units derived from the base units, for example meters/second for speed.