52 knots is about 60 miles per hour.
A steady 336 miles per hour. Record winds of 628miles per hour.
No, though it is close. Winds of 74 mph or greater are considered hurricane force.
The velocity of the winds blowing at 89 miles per hour during a storm on the North Carolina coast is 89 miles per hour.
The winds on Venus are about 300 mph
1 knots = 1.15077945 miles per hour, thus:50 x 1.15077945 = 57.5389725 mph
49 knots is approximately equal to 56.4 miles per hour (mph).
A Cessna 172 can cruise at around 112 Kts which is equal to around 129 Mph.
35 miles per hour
F1 winds speeds are 71-112 miles per hour.
As of now, no storm has been officially recorded with sustained winds over 300 miles per hour. The most powerful tropical cyclone on record is Hurricane Patricia, which reached winds of 215 miles per hour in 2015. Tornadoes can exhibit extreme wind speeds, with some estimates suggesting winds may exceed 300 miles per hour in the most intense tornadoes, but these are not sustained over long distances like tropical storms.
A tropical storm.
It's a measure of speed. (Like miles per hour (mph), or kilometers per hour (kph)). The Cessna 172 has a takeoff speed of about 55 knots (kts). A Boeing 737 has a takeoff speed of about 135-140 knots. On takeoff, aircraft need to reach a certain speed to get into the air.