Instant · Precise · Universal
32 units available
7 categories total
To m/s: × 1,000. To km/h: × 3,600. To mph: × 2,237.
1 km/s = 1,000 m/s = 3,600 km/h. There are 1,000 meters in a kilometer.
For example, 1 Kilometer per Second (km/s) = 1942.602569 Knot (UK) (kt (UK)).
| Kilometer per Second (km/s) | Knot (UK) (kt (UK)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 194.2602569 |
| 0.5 | 971.3012847 |
| 1 | 1942.602569 |
| 2 | 3885.205139 |
| 5 | 9713.012847 |
| 10 | 19426.02569 |
| 25 | 48565.06424 |
| 50 | 97130.12847 |
| 100 | 194260.2569 |
| 500 | 971301.2847 |
| 1000 | 1942602.569 |
Kilometer per second measures how many kilometers an object travels in one second. Used for very high-speed phenomena like spacecraft, asteroids, and planetary motion.
1 km/s = 1,000 m/s = 3,600 km/h. There are 1,000 meters in a kilometer.
To m/s: × 1,000. To km/h: × 3,600. To mph: × 2,237.
Earth's orbital speed: 29.78 km/s. Moon's orbital speed: 1.02 km/s. Space shuttle orbital speed: 7.8 km/s. Meteor entry: 11–72 km/s.
Solar system escape velocity: 42 km/s. Voyager 1 speed: 17 km/s. Fastest star (S4714 near black hole): 24,000 km/s (8% light speed).
Underestimating the scale — 1 km/s is 3,600 km/h, extremely fast. Confusing with m/s (1000× smaller).
Think of km/s as 'space speeds.' Earth orbits at ~30 km/s. To escape Earth: 11.2 km/s. Moon orbit: ~1 km/s.
The UK knot is a historical variation of the knot based on the British nautical mile (6,080 feet) rather than the international nautical mile (6,076.12 feet).
1 UK knot ≈ 1.853184 km/h = 0.5148 m/s. Slightly faster than the international knot (1.852 km/h).
To international knots: × 1.00064. To km/h: × 1.853. To m/s: × 0.5148.
None in modern use. Only relevant for interpreting historical British naval records.
The difference between UK and international knots is only 0.064% — barely noticeable but important for precise navigation.
Assuming all old British ship logs use the same knot as today — they don't, but the difference is tiny.
Historical only. Effectively identical to modern knot. Only matters for historical maritime research.



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