A reliable way to convert a hand-held 100-yard time to an electronic 100-meter time is to multiply the hh-time by 1.103.
Therefore, 10.2 in the 100-yard dash time equates to an 11.25 100-meter dash time.
Also, to convert an electronic 100-yard dash time to an electronic 100-meter dash time, multiply the first time by 1.088.
For example, a 10.20 electronic 100-yard time equates to an 11.10 electronic 100-meter dash time.
Yes
A kilogram measures mass, and a meter measures length so you can't really compare them. Unless you meant to compare a kilometer to a meter, then it would be 1000 times longer.
The grammar here is confusing. I'll take this as "Compare One cubic meter of air and 1000 cubic meter of air?" 1000 cubic meters is 1000 times more volume than 1 cubic meter
You can't compare that. You can only compare units that measure the same kind of thing: length with length, volume with volume, mass with mass, etc.
23000 times!
One meter
A meter can go into a kilometer 1000 times.... TRUE. The correct (or most plausible) answer to the question above is 0.001 times. It's like trying to squeeze something very large in scale into something that is fractionally smaller... It is possible, but only .001 (or one-thousandths) of a kilometer can fit into a meter.
The 2008 Games will be Somalia's 7th time competing. No Somalian athlete has won an Olympic medal. The 2008 team will have two athletes. Samiyo Yusuf will compete in the women's 400 meter and 800 meter runs and Abdinasir Sneed will compete in the men's 5000 and 10000 meter runs.
Obviously, J.C. Owens is the greatest athlete of all times in Olympic history.
There are 100 centimeters per meter.
yes, by 1,000,000 times
Assuming "quoted value" to be RMS value, or average, [what you would see on a meter], the peak would be that value times 1.414. Going backward, peak times .707 is RMS.
There isn't a time on it . Many were done at different times. The only possible way to find the time is to find all petrographic and compare them