March 1 is a date in the Western calendar. At the equator, it travels at 1668 kilometres per hour (approx 1000 miles an hour).
Answer: 190 km/h = 118.06 mph
112 miles per hour is 180.25 kilometers per hour.
= 240/6 mile/hour = 40 miles/hour
two hours at forty miles an hour. three hours at 33.333 miles an hour 180/5= 36 miles an hour
1000 miles or 20 hours.
1000 miles x 1 hour/70 miles = 14.3 hours or 14 hours and 18 minutes.
would depend on which speed you where travelling 60 miles / hour 1000 divided by 60 = 16.7 hours 70 miles / hour 1000 divided by 70 = 14.3 hours 80 miles / hour 1000 divided by 80 = 12.5 hours 90 miles / hour 1000 divided by 90 = 11.1 hours 100 miles / hour 1000 divided by 100 = 10.0 hours 50 km / hour 1000 divided by 50 km = 20.0 hours 60 km / hour 1000 divided by 60 km = 16.7 hours 70 km / hour 1000 divided by 70 km = 14.3 hours 80 km / hour 1000 divided by 80 km = 12.5 hours 90 km / hour 1000 divided by 90 km = 11.1 hours 100 km / hour 1000 divided by 100 km = 10.0 hours
The speed of rotation is greatest at the equator; 1038 miles per hour.
The Earth turns at 1000 miles an hour. If any place went slower or faster it would look like Jupiter. It would rip the Earth apart. Even at the poles you would spin at 1000 miles an hour.
It depends on the speed. At 10 miles per hour 100 miles is 10 hours. At 100 miles an hour it is 1 hour. At 1000 miles an hour it is 0.1 hour (= 6 minutes).
I think the earth is 93000000 miles from the sun and it spins at about 1000 miles per hour hence it is about 24000 miles around and one revolution is one day
In terms of angular velocity, because it takes roughly 86,400 seconds per 1 Earth revolution, it is:2 * pi / 86400 = 7.269 * 10-5 rad/sLinear velocity of a point on Earth's surface due to rotation depends on latitude. On equator it is about 1,674.4 km/h and obviously 0 km/h on either pole.
1600
about 1000 miles
1000/25 = 40 hours.
The linear speed of the Earth's rotation at any latitude can be calculated by multiplying the cosine of the latitude by the equatorial rotational speed of the Earth, which is approximately 1670 kilometers per hour (1037 miles per hour). At latitude 60.24 degrees north, the linear speed of the Earth's rotation would be approximately 835 kilometers per hour (519 miles per hour).