It depends on the country, the class and the model. For instance, the french navy Toulon based CHARLES DE GAULLE carrier, also known as one of the smallest and harder Aircraft carrier to land on, is 260 meters long, and weights about 42.600 tons. US-Nimitz class are much bigger.
Millimeters!?!?
The space shuttle would not be able to land on an Aircraft carrier. It needs a lot longer runway.
At 30 knots it would take about 6 days for an Aircraft Carrier to cross the Atlantic. And about 10 days to cross the Pacific.
Pick a job that is associated with aircraft would improve your chances of being on a carrier.
In a fleet there would be as many as 50+ aircrafts. It depends of it is a aircraft carrier or some other base.
The Nimitz-class aircraft carrier costs about $4.5 billion to make. The Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier cost would cost about $14 billion including research and development costs.
It depends on where the carrier gets hit. On the strongest spot the aircraft carrier would handle more punishments but on the weakest spot it will sink in two or three hits with the torpedo.
I would measure it with a ruler.
to be fair it all depends on the size of the aircraft. a Hercules could but it is slightly smaller than your average civil aircraft. i would suppose so yes. yes its possible
The most appropriate unit of measure for the length of an airplane is typically in feet or meters, depending on the region. In the United States, aircraft dimensions are often expressed in feet, while most other countries use meters. Using these units provides a clear and standardized way to convey the size of various types of aircraft.
centimeter
Any measure of length will do, but the most common would be feet or meters.