Want this question answered?
Yes. A tornado that travels a kilometer would not be uncommon. Such a path length would be typical of a weak tornado. The more destructive tornadoes that get national or international coverage typically travel much further, sometimes dozens of kilometers and can be well over a kilometer wide, in rare cases several kilometers wide.
Light travels at 299,792.211 km per second in a vacuum.
That's aproximately the distance sound travels in one second, in air. Since light travels at a speed of 300,000 kilometers per second, the answer is, approximately 300,000 kilometers.
Sound travels at 1,225.044 kilometers per hour at sea level.
1,000/6 = 1662/3 miles per hour
0.5m/km Divide meters fall (200) by kilometers flowed (400).
sixty
Meters per Kilometer M/K 2000 / 250 = 8 meters per kilometer
60 KPH
14.634 kilometers per hour.
Global winds travel thousands of kilometers in steady patterns
3 hrs & 34 minutes is the same as 3.56666666666 hours. Divide this into 90 km and your answer is 25.233645 km/h (average)
In this case, just divide the distance by the time.
30 kilometers per hour.
240divided by 4 = 60 kph
mercury travels at about 48 kilometers per second, or 172,000 kilometers per hour.
87.5 kph