It is impossible to calculate this as we would need to know the radius of the car's wheel.
Second minute: the si base unit for time is secondvelocity: the si base unit for velocity is meters / second (m/s)
120 Kilometres = 120,000 metres There are 60 minutes in an hour 120,000 divided by 60 = 2,000 2,000 metres per minute (or 2 Kilometres per minute)
Saturn rotates quickly, once in 10.2 hours, so in one minute it would rotate through 0.59 degrees. At the equator of Saturn's visible surface that would be about 600 kilometres per minute.
It means how fast something rotates. Rather than taking the linear speed (meters per second, or some other common unit of speed), the angular velocity is specified in radians per second, degrees per second, revolutions (full turns) per minute, or something similar. By this definition, each part of a solid, rotating object rotates at the same angular speed.
155 × 60 = 9,300 metres per hour.
80/10 = 8 metres per minute
That's 1,5 km. In a car it takes about 1 minute or less.
50 metres = 1 second 3,000 metres = 1 minute = 3 kilometres 180 kilometres = 1 hour assuming 'in seconds' means one second
The average velocity during that period is 50 kilometers per hour north.
The answer completely depends on the size of the wheel. The question neglects to give this vital piece of information, so it's not possible to calculate an answer.
375 meters/per minute
are a measure of angular velocity whereas metres per minute are a measure of linear velocity.