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Four events. It is the same for any track meet, on any level.
assume they are circular, concentric tracks.your angular displacement is the same. ie you both do (say) : 1 degree / sec..the velocities are different in the ratio of track lengths , ie:.if on the 2 mile track your doing 1 degree / sec = 20 mph, then on the ten mile track ( at 1 degree / sec) your doing ((10 / 2 ) * 20 mph) = 100 mph
No. If you can drive around a ten-mile track in the same time it takes you to drive around a one-mile track, then your angular velocity is the same in both cases. But in order to do that, you'll need much higher tangential velocity during the longer run. Tangential velocity is what you'd normally call your 'speed' as you blaze around the track.
There are many lengths, not all are the same. Some are a half mile, one mile and some are 2 miles.
If you run 1 mile on an oval track in ten minutes, your average speed in in miles per hour is six miles per hour(6mi/hr)..gets.....??? six miles per hour. also the same speed as if you ran one mile in a straight line in ten minutes. One hour has 60 minutes. 60 / 10 = 6 . 6 X 1 = 6 miles per hr. Athlete who run a 4 minute mile run at 15 miles per hour
I have been wondering the same thing. I think it's about half a mile.
The same way you measure it on the flat - with a distance-measuring wheel that clicks for every X meters. As for where to measure (as in the inside track is shorter than the outside), I'm not sure
no. 0.125 miles is the same as an eighth of a mile
The treadmill instructions should specify the length of a "lap". A typical track-and-field track in the US (the sort you'd find circling a football field at an American high school) has a length of 440 yards, which is one quarter of a mile. Assuming the treadmill is using the same definition of a "lap", four such laps would constitute a mile.
An Athlete with a weight of 100kg, running at the same speed as a 90 kg athlete will have a greater momentum and will push the 90 kg athlete backwards.
Four times around. 4 times around a 400m track would equal 1600 meters. 1 mile is equal to 1,609.34 meters. You would need to either start 9.34 meters behind the start line, or run the same distance past the finish line to run one mile (5280ft).
It depends on the speeds of both trains.