6000 miles per hour
Albatross have high glide ratios, around 22:1 to 23:1, meaning that for every metre they drop, they can travel forward 22 metres.[2] They are aided in soaring by a shoulder-lock, a sheet of tendon that locks the wing when fully extended, allowing the wing to be kept outstretched without any muscle expenditure. Albatrosses are so well adapted to this lifestyle that their heart rates while flying are close to their basal heart rate when resting.
Someone pushes it 2 meters.
5,000 meters per hour.
Its effective range is about 2,000 meters but it can travel up to 6,800 meters.
It will take 3.3 seconds to travel 44 meters at 48kph.
Radio waves travel at the speed of light 300 Million meters/second, 300e6 meters/second
5200 meters
1.55 miles = 2494.4832 meters So you must travel 2494.4832 meters before you can say that you have traveled 1.55 miles.
it would be 100-35=65 meters
At 25 meters per second a car will travel 100 meters in 4 seconds and 1000 meters in 40 seconds.
Millions of meters
299,792,458 meters/second