well essentially your 1500 meters pace should be a tad bit slower like the splits should have about 2-10 seconds on them for example 2.10 and 2.15. Yours should be around 4.20-4.40
I disagree. A 1500 runner coming up from 400-800 will be double the 800 time plus about 10-15 seconds. A distance runner coming down to 1500 - the 1500 will get down to close to double the 800 time. So 4.05-4.15 depending on what type of 1500 runner you are.
A split time is basically the time it takes to run a fraction of a race. If there is a 1500 meter race, there could be split times at 400 meters, 800 meters, and 1200 meters. So the time it took to run the first 400 meters of the 1500 meter race would be called a split time.
There are roughly 1600 meters in a miles, so your 1500 meter time multiplied by 1600/1500, or 16/15, would give you a mile time. For example, a 6:00 1500 time would be a 6:24 mile.
1 mile equal 1609,344 m. The conversion is only approximated because the man is not only an instrument and the relation is not absolute linear: time for 1500 m = 1500 X time for 1 mile/1609,344
Using track events as an example, a split time is the time it takes to run a portion of the race. If you are running the 1500 meter race, you might have split times at 400 meters, 800 meters, and 1200 meters.
Too slow.
3:57.90 Kelly Holmes won gold in women's 1500 meter run at the 2004 Summer Games in Athens, defeating Tatyana Tomashova of Russia by .22 seconds.
1500 meters/330 meters per second = 4.55 seconds
Likely that you meant 1500 meters, or almost 1 mile. National class HS girls mile times are under 5 minutes, which equates to a 4:38 1500 m time. A 'good' mile time would be under 6 minutes, which equates to a 5:33 1500 m time.
Because if the given is meter the answer is second and when the given is seconds the answer is meters
A second is a time measurement, a meter is distance. There is no conversion.
11.37 would be for 100 meters.
as fast as ya mum