<em>12,25 km/h</em>
<em>≈ 3,4 m/s </em>
<em>v = d/t</em>
<em>= 12250m/h</em>
<em>= 12,25km/h</em>
<em>or</em>
<em>v = d/t</em>
<em>= 12250m/h</em>
<em>1h = 60m×60s = 3600s</em>
<em>= 12250m/3600s</em>
<em>≈ 3,4 m/s </em>
Answer: C)The yellow car was faster. Yellow traveled at a speed of 50 mph while green was traveling at an average of 40 mph.
Explanation:
The speed of each car is defined as:
where d is the distance traveled by the car and t is the time taken.
For the yellow car, d=400 mi and t=8 h, so its speed is
For the green car, d=400 mi and t=10 h, so its speed is
So, the correct choice is
C)The yellow car was faster. Yellow traveled at a speed of 50 mph while green was traveling at an average of 40 mph.
Answer:Force is to the right
Explanation: because the right side has 75N compared to the 25N on the left.
Answer:
hi there!
the correct answer to this question is: 6.67 mph
Explanation:
you convert minutes to hours
10 miles * 60 mins / 90 mins
The circumference of the Earth at the equator is listed as 24,901 miles.
So his speed is
24,901 miles per day.
Convert it to units that we have a better feel for:
(24,901 mi/da) x (1 da / 24 hrs)
= (24,901 / 24) (miles/hour)
= about 1,038 miles per hour.
You'll find a huge number of people on the internet these days,
telling you that you could not be moving at that speed and not
feel it, so therefore the Earth is not spinning, and it's not a globe.
I have a lot of feelings and comments about those people, their
lines of reasoning, and their levels of education and intelligence,
so don't get me started.
I just want to guarantee you that everything you're learning about
the Earth and the solar system in school is well founded, and it's
all based on the life's work of some of the smartest people of the
past 300 years of human history. Everything you're taught about
the Earth has good reasons behind it, whereas those other people
have nothing.
A person on Earth's equator is moving from west to east at roughly
1,038 miles per hour, relative to any point on the Earth's rotation axis.