For your first half marathon, probably 10-13 minutes per mile, or if you are walking a little bit too, 13-16 minutes per mile. If you are a super amazing runner and/or have run a half-marathon before, then the sky's the limit.
Just under 13 minutes per mile (a slow jog or very fast walk, depending upon the individual).
The pace for that time is 11:27 per mile.
11laps
A half of an hour is 30 min. and hour and a half is 90 min.
15 min.
There are 60 minutes in an hour therefore the number of minutes in half an hour is 60x0.5=30.
There are 90 minutes in an hour and a half.
60 minutes equals an hour and half an hour is 30 minutes so 60 min+30 min =90 minutes.
90 min are in a hour and a half90since an hour is 60 minutes and a half hour is half that (30) you just do a simple addition for your answer60+30=90 minutesThe number of mintues in a half hour are 30 minutes because a full hour is 60 minutes and if you divide it in to 2's u get 30 min!
5 min 20 sec = 16/3 min per mileSo she runs at 3/16 miles per minute = 60*3/16 miles per hour = 11.25 miles.However, it is unlikely that any runner can maintain their 5-minute pace for an hour.5 min 20 sec = 16/3 min per mileSo she runs at 3/16 miles per minute = 60*3/16 miles per hour = 11.25 miles.However, it is unlikely that any runner can maintain their 5-minute pace for an hour.5 min 20 sec = 16/3 min per mileSo she runs at 3/16 miles per minute = 60*3/16 miles per hour = 11.25 miles.However, it is unlikely that any runner can maintain their 5-minute pace for an hour.5 min 20 sec = 16/3 min per mileSo she runs at 3/16 miles per minute = 60*3/16 miles per hour = 11.25 miles.However, it is unlikely that any runner can maintain their 5-minute pace for an hour.
You must maintain a pace of 10 miles per hour.
30 minutes ...There are 60 min in an hr, so a half an hr is 60/2 = 30 min.
A half hour is 30 min so there is two half hours in an hour
A 13k race in 1 hour 11 minutes 35 seconds equates to a pace of 7 min 49 sec per mile.
Obviously depends upon your fitness and, in particular, your endurance.To use myself as an example, over a 21.7km course my average pace will be almost identical (maybe 1/10th of a km per hour off) to my 5km run pace.Generally speaking, you have to be a fairly stong runner to make it in under 1hr 30 min, very stong to make it in under 1hr 20min.For most people with decent running ability a sub 2 hour time should be achievable, however if not used to the endurance aspect it should be noted that many people 'hit the wall' at around the 1/2 to 2/3rd mark (primarily due to going out too hard at the start & trying to keep pace with the lead pack) Running a 1/2 marathon for an avg man in the 30-34 brackets,,,,1:35:00-1:40:00 thats with training. Hill works is what you want when getting faster.To improve upon the above answer:It would be suicide to attempt to race a half marathon at the same pace one would race a 5K. If the original poster actually does this, he is merely running all races at a comfortable pace...not actually racing.Typically, 5K pace would be 30-40 seconds faster a mile than half marathon pace. In other words, if you can run a 5K in 21 minutes (about a 6:45 pace), your half marathon pace would be about 7:15."Hill work is what you want" to get faster may or may not be true. For any runner, more MILES equals faster times. It's that simple. Once you have a consistent base of miles, adding speedwork (not hills) is your best bet. Hills definitely can make you stronger, but head to the track first.