Well, 125 cm is about 49.2 inches, since an inch is about 2.54 cm, which is about 4.1 feet. Now there are 5,280 feet in a mile, and 3,600 seconds in an hour, so a foot per second is 3600 feet per hour which is 3600/5280 mile per hour, which works out to 15/22 mile per hour. So 125 cm per second is about 4.1 feet per second which is about 66/22 or 3 miles per hour.
0.09m/s
Divide by 360,000. 100 for cm to metre and 3600 for hour to sec.
It is 0.024 kilograms per cm^3 or 24 grams per cm^3.
5 cm/year
The density of the material is 20g/125 cubic metres = 0.00000016 grams per cubic centimetre.Volume is measured in cubic units of length and so it has been assumed that "125 cm" refers to 125 cubic metres.The density of the material is 20g/125 cubic metres = 0.00000016 grams per cubic centimetre.Volume is measured in cubic units of length and so it has been assumed that "125 cm" refers to 125 cubic metres.The density of the material is 20g/125 cubic metres = 0.00000016 grams per cubic centimetre.Volume is measured in cubic units of length and so it has been assumed that "125 cm" refers to 125 cubic metres.The density of the material is 20g/125 cubic metres = 0.00000016 grams per cubic centimetre.Volume is measured in cubic units of length and so it has been assumed that "125 cm" refers to 125 cubic metres.
0.09m/s
== 0.000946969697 mph
Divide by 360,000. 100 for cm to metre and 3600 for hour to sec.
19.2m/min calculation 60 sec/1 min * 32 cm/sec * 1 m/100cm
Conversion: cm per second x 0.02237 = miles per hour
The speed of light is approx 300,000 km/sec. That is 300,000*100,000 cm per sec = 3.0*1010 cm per second = 3.0*1010 *60*60 = 1.08*1014 cm per hour.
1 meter = 100 centimeters1 minute = 60 seconds(3.5 cm/sec) x (60 sec/min) x (1/100 meter/cm) = (3.5 x 60 / 100) (cm - sec - meter / sec - min - cm)= 2.1 meter/minute
approx 10 cm / sec for a fish about 2 to inches long
12.5 there are 10 mm per cm.
It is 0.024 kilograms per cm^3 or 24 grams per cm^3.
in my science book it says pebbles move .75 cm/sec
There is an unconfirmed report of a fast species reaching 60 cm/sec (2 fps, 1.3 mph).