Depends what you read. Without further details, I've read American torpedo, fast ; Russian torpedo very, very fast.
Traditional torpedoes (like those used during WWII) have a speed in water of about 25 to 30 knots (50 km/h).
Experimental modern "supercavitation" torpedoes can travel at speeds up to 200 knots (360 km/h)
Actually, both are the ways of traveling the data from client machine to server machine.But the difference is that data will travel through GET as a query_string and through POST as a input_string. *Length of query_string is 256 but the length of input_string is unlimited. *GET is fast as compare to POST. *GET is visible POST is invisible.
Technically sound is classified as a vibration of the air, so if there is a sound traveling through it, it travels at the speed of sound, which is 768 mph. The inner parts of the ear will be slower. The auditory ossicles are mechanical, so they will delay the sound accordingly, a small fraction of a second. Then when the auditory nerve is stimulated to send its message to the temporal lobe of the brain, it follows a myelinated path along the axons and can travel up to 200 mph.
the flow through by pass flowmeter is known as fast loop or speed loop, to reduced the time lag between sample system and sample point.
Farmer=big field hose = spray little water irrigation = give lots of water farmer = not lots of time hose + big field = long time lots of water + big field = quick and fast farmer + quick and fast = happy
HEP (hydro-electric project)...Electricity is produced by the fast motion of water turning turbines. Hydro dams can control the speed of the flow of the water, holding water back until the dam can be opened and produce a really fast surge to turn the turbine and make the electric power. Then the owner sells the power for a profit.
3400mph
3,348 mph.
well, I've been told that it travels through water at about 3400mph.
it travels pretty fast at about 266.5 miles per second. its pretty cool.
Fast tsunamis travel in deep water because they have long wavelengths and low amplitudes, allowing them to move quickly with minimal energy loss. The speed of a tsunami is determined by the depth of the water it is traveling through, with deeper water supporting faster wave propagation. Tsunamis are not affected by surface friction in deep water, which also contributes to their fast travel speed.
About the same speed as through water (about 3300 mph).
quite fast
Sound travels around 1,500 meters per second through water, which is about 4.3 times faster than through air.
The speed at which water travels through a pipe depends on factors like the pipe diameter, pressure, and the viscosity of the water. In general, water can travel through a pipe at speeds ranging from a few feet per second to several hundred feet per second.
Sound cannot travel through a vacuum as it needs a medium, such as air, water, or solid material, to propagate. In a vacuum, there are no particles for sound waves to travel through, so the speed of sound is essentially zero.
Oxygen
20 mph