Since 60 minutes is "an hour" and you are running at 5.2 miles per hour for 60 minutes, the answer would be 5.2 miles. (Maybe it would be easier to under stand if you change miles per hour to miles in an hour.)
Roughly- half a mile. depending on your physique, fitness levels. ect..
$500,000 billion a minute or second
Just write down exactly what you've included in the question, and eventuallysomething will look promising:--> 7 minutes per mile--> 1 mile per 7 minutes = (1 mile) / (7 minutes) = (1/7) (mile/minute)1/7th mile per minute is a perfectly good number for speed. But if it doesn't seem tomean much, you can convert it to miles per hour.1 hour is 60 minutes. So, whatever ground you can cover in one minute, you can cover60 times as much in an hour.(1/7) (mile/minute) x (60 minutes/hour) = (60/7) (mile/hour) = 8.57 mph
It takes one minute- there are 60 minutes in a hour, so if the car is doing 60mph, then it's travelling a mile every minute.
It would take 30 minutes to drive 30 miles at 60 mph. This is because since there are 60 minutes in an hour, at 60 mph it's the same as going a mile a minute. At a mile a minute, 30 miles would take 30 minutes.
50 feet per minute.
One second of latitude equals 100.39 feet . . .here is the proof:one degree = 60 Nautical Miles or 69 Statute miles; (conversion factor 69/60 = 1.15)one minute minute = 1 Nautical Mileone second = 1 Nautical Mile / by 60 seconds = 0.01666 of a Nautical Mileuse conversion factor of 1.15 x 0.01666 = 0.019159 x a Statute Mile -->equals (5420 ft X 0.019159) = 100.39 feet per second of latitudeRead more: How_much_distance_on_the_earth's_surface_does_one_second_of_latitude_equals
It so much depends on how fast you run and how fast you swim and what type of stroke, and your weight. But roughly, say you run a 10 minute mile you burn 100 calories; say you swim 12 laps (300 meters) in 10 minutes you burn about the same 100 calories. A mile is 1600 meters, so a mile swim is a about a 5 mile run. Or 12 laps is about a mile run
its pumps about 100 beats a minute
Depends On The Speed 8:] 1mph = 1 Hour 10mph = 6 Minutes 100mph = 1 Minute
There are 60 seconds in one minute.
Oh, dude, one second of latitude is about 30.9 meters. So, like, if you're standing at the North Pole and you walk one second of latitude, you'll have covered almost 31 meters. But who's counting, right? Just keep walking and enjoy the view!