somehow, you can find out how long it takes for the sound to get to the desired area then find out the distance between them and distance divided by time is speed
The Speed of light is about 300,0000 m/s (metres per second)
About 94.000 mph (from 25000 to 160,000 mph)
nano sec and before that it is plankton sec nano sec= about speed of sound plankton sec= about the speed at which the universe is expanding o-o that's pretty fast ( or faster than light travels)
The air pressure has no effect. The static air pressure p_ and the density ρ of air (air density) are proportional at the same temperature. The ratio p_ / ρ is always constant, on a high mountain or even on sea level altitude. That means, the ratio p_ / ρ is always constant on a high mountain, and even at "sea level". The static atmospheric pressure p_ and the density of air ρ go always together. The ratio stays constant. When calculating the speed of sound, forget the atmospheric pressure, but look accurately at the very important temperature. The speed of sound varies with altitude (height) only because of the changing temperature there.
It has a long O sound, and one short E sound. The first E is a short vowel, the second E is an unstressed or schwa sound, the O is a long O, and the third E is silent.
The Speed of light is about 300,0000 m/s (metres per second)
Fish. Gh in cough is f sound, the o in women is I sound, and the ti in station is an sh sound. So ghoti is fish
The ending '-ough' can sound two different ways. It can sound like an 'o' ending, such as in:doughthoughthrough (u sound)Or it can have an 'f' sound, like in:coughroughtough
About 94.000 mph (from 25000 to 160,000 mph)
"t-h-e s-o-u-n-d o-f s-t-a-t-i-c"
-- Measure the distance between two points.-- Measure the time it takes the jet to fly from one point to the other one.-- The speed of the jet between the two points is(the distance between them)/(the time it takes to fly from one to the other)
The O has a long O (oh) sound, as in bold and gold.
It has a long O (oh) sound, as in no and so.
No, the word "spot" has a long 'o' sound.
101.7 kph in a GPS, and 122 kph on analog speedometer
nano sec and before that it is plankton sec nano sec= about speed of sound plankton sec= about the speed at which the universe is expanding o-o that's pretty fast ( or faster than light travels)
No, the word "from" does not have a short "o" sound. The "o" in "from" is pronounced as the diphthong /ɒʊ/.