The speed of an ant varies by species, but typically, ants can run at speeds of about 1 to 3 centimeters per second. When converted to kilometers per hour, this is roughly 0.004 to 0.011 km/h. Some faster species may reach speeds up to 0.2 km/h. Overall, ants are not particularly fast compared to many other insects.
I love that this is in the ant category. 0.4167 mm/s, or 64.96 ft/hr
nahi aaata
Extremely fast: 1 hour = 3600 seconds speed = distance/time = 1 mi / 45 s = 1/45 mi/s = 1/45 mi/s x 3600 s/hr = 3600/45 mi/hr = 80 mph!
20km/hr
To calculate speed, use the formula: speed = distance/time. Here, the distance is 100 km and the time is 2 hours. Therefore, speed = 100 km / 2 hr = 50 km/hr.
Shoiab Akhter recorded speed 100.7 Miles/Hr in SA Jeff Thompson recorded speed 100.4 Miles/Hr in Aus Brett Lee recorded speed 99.5 Miles/Hr in Aus
That's the speed.
The slope of the ant's displacement vs. time graph The total displacement divided by the time.
60 mins = 1 hr distance = speed × time = 67 mph × (5 hr + 14.4 min) = 67 mph × (5 hr + 14.4 ÷ 60 hr) = 67 miles/hr × 5.24 hr = 351.08 miles.
Speed by definition = distance/time; in this instance 1307 mi/2.35 hr = 556 mi/hr, to the justified number of significant digits.
The average speed of an ant that crawls 1 meter in 45 seconds can be calculated using the formula: speed = distance/time. In this case, the speed is 1 meter divided by 45 seconds, which equals approximately 0.0222 meters per second. Therefore, the ant's average speed is around 0.0222 m/s.
178.8 km/hr or 111.1012 mi/hr