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Distance = sqrt(x2 + y2)
yes you can. It will represent longitude and latitude. Take the longitude and latitude from the first point and from the second one place the values in the formula you get the distance.
The distance is 0.
A point on the number line, at a distance of 2.2 units to the right from the origin.
The radius is the distance between the center of a circle and a point on the circle
Twice the distance between a point and halfway to the other point.
The distance between one point of a wave to the same point on the next wave is called the wavelength.
Between the initial point and the final point.
169 feet
The distance between the above places is 51 miles. This distance is point to point straight distance. The actual distance may vary according to the flight path chosen.
instantaneous acceleration* * * * *No it does not.The graph is a distance-time graph so the coordinates of a point on the graph represent the position (distance) at the specified time. The gradient of the tangent to the curve at that point represents the instantaneous radial velocity. The second derivative at that point, if it exists, would represent the acceleration.
The distance between the above places is 4254 miles. This distance is point to point straight distance. The actual distance may vary according to the flight path chosen. Also this is not the airport to airport precise distance.