Instant · Precise · Universal
32 units available
7 categories total
To km/h: × 3.6. To ft/s: × 3.281. 1,483 m/s = 5,339 km/h = 3,317 mph.
Depends on water temperature, salinity, and pressure. At 20°C, pure water: ~1,483 m/s. Varies with depth and location.
For example, 1 Velocity of Sound in Pure Water (vs (H₂O)) = 5337720 Meter per Hour (m/h).
| Velocity of Sound in Pure Water (vs (H₂O)) | Meter per Hour (m/h) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 533772 |
| 0.5 | 2668860 |
| 1 | 5337720 |
| 2 | 10675440 |
| 5 | 26688600 |
| 10 | 53377200 |
| 25 | 133443000 |
| 50 | 266886000 |
| 100 | 533772000 |
| 500 | 2668860000 |
| 1000 | 5337720000 |
The speed of sound in pure water at 20°C is approximately 1,482.7 m/s, significantly faster than in air due to water's higher density and bulk modulus.
Depends on water temperature, salinity, and pressure. At 20°C, pure water: ~1,483 m/s. Varies with depth and location.
To km/h: × 3.6. To ft/s: × 3.281. 1,483 m/s = 5,339 km/h = 3,317 mph.
Sonar (submarine detection, fish finding), ultrasound imaging, underwater communication, and oceanographic measurements.
Sound in water travels ~4.3× faster than in air. Whales can communicate over hundreds of km using this. SOFAR channel enables even longer distances.
Assuming sound speed in water equals sound in air — it's much faster. Also, forgetting temperature dependence.
~1,500 m/s in water (rule of thumb). 4–5× faster than in air. Increases with temperature, salinity, and depth.
Meter per hour measures the distance in meters traveled over the course of one hour. It's a very slow speed unit used for measuring gradual processes.
1 m/h = 1/3600 m/s = 0.000278 m/s. Very small speed unit for very slow processes.
To m/s: ÷ 3,600. To km/h: ÷ 1,000. To ft/h: × 3.281.
Glacier movement (typically 10–200 m/h in fast glaciers), hair growth (0.0001 m/h), slow industrial processes, and scientific experiments.
Average glacier: 10–100 m/h. Tectonic plate movement: ~0.005 m/h. Bamboo (fastest growing plant): up to 0.091 m/h.
Confusing m/h with m/s — m/h is 3,600 times slower. Using it for normal speeds instead of km/h or m/s.
Remember: 1,000 m/h = 1 km/h. Useful for very slow processes. Think glaciers, not cars.



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