125 meters per minute.
402 meters in 4 minutes 47 seconds = 3.13 miles per hour.
30,000 metres or 30km
Its length in meters times its width in meters is its square area in meters.
The question is vague but if you travel a distance of 1.2 miles in 30 minutes then you have travelled just over 1,931 meters (1,931.2128m). Assuming that your speed is constant then you covered that distance at a speed of 2.4 mph or 3.86 km/h (3,862 m/h)
66metres
no
402 meters in 4 minutes 47 seconds = 3.13 miles per hour.
The current world record for swimming a mile (1,609 meters) is held by Katie Ledecky, with a time of 15 minutes and 20.48 seconds. She achieved this record in 2018.
The area of Fort Caroline is 560,044.460295936 square meters.
Well for a competitive swimmer in longcourse it should be about 4-6 ( depends on age an level) so the average person that doesn't practice swimming probably 15 minutes if they could even finish it( depending on how physically fit they are and how their general technique is in swimming) 400 meters is a lot for someone who doesn't swim- thats 16 laps in a shortcourse pool and 8 in a longcourse.
If a train that goes 500 meters every 10 seconds you will cover 30,000 meters in 10 minutes. <><><> There are 6 units of 10 seconds to a minute. 6x500= 3000 meters per minute. X 10 minutes= 30,000
There are usually 50 meters in a Olympic sized swimming pool.
It wouldn't be. If you're swimming in meters the pool should be 50 meters, and I've seen them be 25 meters occasionally. If you're swimming in yards the pool would be 25 yards.
33,055m or 33.055Km
in an olympic swimming pool its 50m
30,000 metres or 30km
The newer the pool, the higher the chance that it's measured in meters. Proffesional or school swimming pools are measured in yards or meters. The newer the pool, the higher the chance that it's measured in meters. Proffesional or school swimming pools are measured in yards or meters.