NO
Altitude is the distance above sea level and is generally measured in feet in the US, if you mean 6 miles above sea level then it would be a measurement of altitude. FYI 6 miles above sea level is higher than Mt. Everest.
The altitude of the jetliner is 6 miles.
31,680 feet = 6 miles.
one light year
Height or altitude.
Boing 747's, popularly known as Jumbo Jets, typically cruise at around 32,000 to 38,000 feet altitude. This is between about 6 and 7 miles high.
The altitude of the stratosphere increases as you move upward from the Earth's surface. It starts at around 10-13 kilometers (6-8 miles) and extends up to about 50 kilometers (31 miles) above the Earth's surface.
No. 3 tons is weight, while altitude is distance from sealevel.
1 ' = 0.3048 m, so multiply the altitude in feet by 0.3048 to get altitude in meters It is the same for altitude as for any other linear measurement.
An isosceles triangle can be considered as two right angle triangles joined together so use the tangent ratio to find its altitude: tan30 degrees = opp/6 (where opp is the altitude and 6 is half the base) 6*tan30 degrees = 3.464101615 units of measurement
The first recorded measurement of altitude was by the ancient Greeks, who used trigonometry to measure the height of the Great Pyramid of Giza around 2500 BCE. This method laid the foundation for later developments in altitude measurement techniques.
Yes, altitude is a noun, a singular common noun, a word for measurement in height in relation to sea level or the ground; altitude is a thing.
You can't convert them. They are two different things. Miles is a measurement of distance, whereas square miles is a measurement of area. To get 12 square miles, there are different ways, like 3 miles by 4 miles, or 6 miles by 2 miles. 12 miles by 12 miles gives 144 square miles.