well lets see. on a 400m track every lane out is an extra 40m. 4 laps on a 400m track is a mile. so 6m times 40m is 240m. so one lap around a 400m track in lane 7 would be 640m. a mile is 1609m. 640m goes into 1609 meters 2.5640625 times. 2 and a half laps is a mile in lane 7.
I may "know" something but not understand it. I'll give you an example: I know that Columbus sailed in 1492, but I may not understand why he sailed or what he was doing. There are 4 types of learning according to man named Bloom. There is recall ( which would be "knowing"), comphrension ( which would be "understanding"), evaluation ( which takes it beyond comphrension to an ability to take it apart and exp lane it) and finally invention ( the ability to take the info from above and add to it or invent something new on the same line). Ideally, we want students to go through the 4 stages of learning to have real learning. If they stop at recall many times they loose the info somewhere along the line and it doesn't carry forward into true learning.
4 it dosent matter what lane it is
Its is 4 times around the track for outside track! THANKS HOPE THAT I HELP!!
Try it and find out.
walking around a standard track is 1/4 miles
Yes, because in lane 1 from the very beginning is 1 mile exactly, 4 times around the track that is. While if you ran the whole thing in lane 8, 4x around the track, you'd just be running even further.
4
5 miles four laps is equal to 1 mile 20/4=5
well lets see. on a 400m track every lane out is an extra 40m. 4 laps on a 400m track is a mile. so 6m times 40m is 240m. so one lap around a 400m track in lane 7 would be 640m. a mile is 1609m. 640m goes into 1609 meters 2.5640625 times. 2 and a half laps is a mile in lane 7.
If you are referring to a standard track, no. 4 laps would equal 1 mile. 6 laps would equal 1.5 miles.
From the staggered start, it is 400 meters around. The stagger is calculated by subtracting the extra distance one goes around a wider diameter. For each lane it is double the lane width (which in the Olympics is 1.22m) times pi. for each additional lane.
It depends on how long the track is, but on the normal 400M track, it takes a little more than four laps to make a mile (1609.344M), in lane 1. If you use the line marked 400M in each lane, then you will also run 400M in that lane, but once you go past the common start/finish line, you are going more than 400M per lap. The distance covered will be different depending upon whether the outside lane is the 4th lane (some practice and MS tracks), the 6th lane (some small HS tracks), the 8th lane (most HS, college and international tracks) or the 9th lane (some elite college and Olympic level international tracks).
A little more than 400 meters. To be more precise, the line you run around in a track which has an inside lane of 400 metres, and lane width of 1.27 metres including one lane marking, is 407.980 metres.