your mom! :D
A knot in a tropical depression refers to the measure of wind speed within the system. One knot is equivalent to one nautical mile per hour. It is used to quantify the strength of the depression in terms of wind intensity.
"kn" stands for knots, which is a unit of speed equivalent to one nautical mile per hour. It is commonly used to measure wind speed, with 1 knot equal to approximately 1.15 miles per hour or 1.85 kilometers per hour.
for a perfect game, zero. the less wind, the better
The current wind speed on the wind speed chart is 40 kilometers per hour.
1 knot per hour equals one nautical mile per hour which is equal to 1.151 mph so the wind is going a bit faster than 1 mph.
-Speed of the wind (in Miles per hour or Kilometers per hour) -Direction that the wind is COMING FROM.
Beaufort is a scale used to estimate wind speed ranging from 0 (calm) to 12 (hurricane-force). One knot is equal to one nautical mile per hour, which is approximately 1.15 statute miles per hour or 1.85 kilometers per hour.
Kilometers/Miles per hour
1 knot is 1 nautical mile per hour, but the words knot and nautical mile are not always interchangeable in sentences (that is, to say something like "he is 1 knot to the north" would not be grammatically correct. Instead you should say "he is 1 nautical mile to the north", just as it is not truly correct to say "The wind speed was 30 nautical miles per hour". In this case you should say "The wind speed was 30 knots").
There's a thing called the Beaufort scale that doesn't really have units, and is based on water wave action at a given wind velocity. Beaufort 0 is dead calm and Beaufort 12 is a hurricane. Knots (nautical miles per hour) is how wind is usually measured. One knot is about 1.15 MPH. Meters per second (m/s) is another way wind speed is described, as well as miles per hour. (mph) (Any unit of length) divided by (any unit of time) is a unit of speed. Any unit of speed can be used to describe the speed of wind. The most common units used for that purpose are "kilometer per hour" . . kilometers per hour "mile per hour" . . . . . . statute miles per hour "knot" . . . . . . . . . . . . . nautical miles per hour
There is evidence of wind on Uranus. Wind speeds on Uranus can reach 560 miles per hour, or 900 kilometers per hour.
300 kph