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Since the circumference of Earth is about 40,000 km, the calculation is 40,000 km / 24 hours = about 1700 km/h.
The earth spins around at the equator at a speed of roughly 900 miles per hour. 360degrees/24hours x 60 miles/degree = 900 Miles /hour. Also, with a circumference of 24,000 miles covered in 24 hours yields 1,000 miles per hour.
1,040 miles per hour (rounded)
A point on the Earth's surface moves at approximately(1,670 kilometers per hour) x (cosine of its latitude).-- 1,670 kilometers per hour on the equator.-- 1,446 kilometers per hour at 30° latitude-- 1,181 kilometers per hour at 45° latitude-- 835 kilometers per hour at 60° latitude-- 432 kilometers per hour at 75° latitude-- zero at the poles
It depends where you are on the earth, specifically how far north or south of the equator. At the north or south pole, the speed of rotation is zero. The fastest rotational speed occurs at the equator, where a fixed point rotates the entire circumference of the earth in 24 hours. The speed is about 1,040 miles per hour.
Since the circumference of Earth is about 40,000 km, the calculation is 40,000 km / 24 hours = about 1700 km/h.
At the equator, approximately 40,000 kilometers / 24 hours. That is almost 1700 kilometers/hour.
If the fixed point is the intersection of the celestial equator and the hour circle that intersects the body's position on the celestial sphere, it is declination.
Traveling at 60 miles per hour how long would it take to travel from point C to point D?
the equator
40.07516 hours length of equator=40075.16km so divide that by the speed of the plane p.s. did u mean 1000km per hour?
The earth spins around at the equator at a speed of roughly 900 miles per hour. 360degrees/24hours x 60 miles/degree = 900 Miles /hour. Also, with a circumference of 24,000 miles covered in 24 hours yields 1,000 miles per hour.
5:00 pm
Well, the answer is quite simple, but I'm not going to give you the answer to your homework.Think of it this way, if you're traveling 15 miles per hour, how long will it take to travel 15 miles? The answer is obvious, 1 hour.So, all you must do now is divide 60 by 15, and you know how many hours it takes to travel from point A to point B. Then, all you have to do is double your answer to get how many hours it will take to travel from point A to point B, and then back to point A.
7 feet.
One rotation every 24 hours (approximately). Since the Earth has a circumference of 40,000 kilometers, that results in a rotational speed of 40,000 km / 24 hr or almost 1700 kilometers/hour. That's the speed at the equator.
There is no such thing as a "missing .901 of an hour". If anybody told you the Earth rotated 1000 miles per hour at the equator, then that is an approximation. Divide the circumference by 24 to get a more exact value.