If there is 64 mi/h what is that in ft/sec?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: 64 mi/hr ÷ 60 = 1.066... mi/min
1.06666 ÷ 60 = 0.0177777... mi/sec
0.01777 × 5280 = 93.867 ft/sec

Related Questions

What is the middle number of 8 and 15
Given C(x, 16), D(2, -4), E(-6,14) and F(-2,4) find the value of x so that CD is parrallel to EF
If point A is located at (-7, -3), and there are 12 points between A and B, what could be the possible coordinates for point B?
Which two points should the line of best fit go through to best represent the data in the scatterplot? On a graph, points are at (1, 16), (2, 15), (3, 14), (4, 9), (5, 8), and (6, 1). (1, 16) and (2, 15) (1, 16) and (6, 1) (2, 15) and (4, 9) (5, 8) and (6, 1)
Jessica has no books.wesley has 2 more books than jessica.how many books does wesley have ?

Does anyone know this?

Answers

Answer:

120 degrees

Step-by-step explanation:

180 - 60 = 120

Answer:

60

Step-by-step explanation:

all sides are equal to each other:)

Using the order of operations rule, solve the following: 12 ÷ 2 + 4 – 2 × 3 = ? A. 24 B. 36 C. 0 D. 4

Answers

the answer is D, because you have to divide 12 by 2 so you get 6 then 2 times 3 to get 6, so now you should have 6+4-6 which will then become 10-6 which equals 4 
Use\ PEMDAS:\n\n\underbrace{12:2}_(=6)+4-\underbrace{2*3}_(=6)=6+4-6=10-6=\boxed{4}

Ben is greeting customers at a music store. Of the first 20 people he sees enter the store, 9 are wearing jackets and 11 are not. What is the experimental probability that the next person to enter the store will be wearing a jacket? Enter your answer as a simplified fraction.

Answers

The experimental probability that the next person to enter the store will be wearing a jacket is 9/20.

How to calculate the experimental probability?

The experimental probability of an event is defined as the ratio of the number of times the event occurs to the total number of trials or observations.

In this case, we have observed 20 people, and 9 of them were wearing jackets. Therefore, the experimental probability that the next person to enter the store will be wearing a jacket is:

P = Number of people wearing jackets / Total number of people observed

P = 9/20

Therefore, the experimental probability that the next person to enter the store will be wearing a jacket is 9/20.

To know more about experimental probability follow

brainly.com/question/8652467

#SPJ3

maybe when the next person is wearing a jacket that will be 3 since 11 minus 9 equals 2+1 which equals 3and before the person came in there it was 2

Write this number in standard notationten thousand one hundred forty-two and nine tenths

Answers

ten thousand one hundred forty-two and nine tenths

10,142.9

Nick has $7.00. Bagels cost $0.75 each and a small container of cream cheese costs $1.29. Write an inequality to find the numbers of bagels Nick can buy. Identify what your variable represents.

Answers

I believe the answer is 1.29+(0.75x)=7.00          hope i helped

Is 0.6 equal to 0.06

Answers

no, no, and no again.