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Quantitylength
Formal name

⚀ennqua·lengthel
⚀ennqua·widthel
⚀ennqua·heightel

Formal abbr⚀e↑lgℓ
⚀e↑wdℓ
⚀e↑hgtℓ 
Colloquial name⚀global·length
⚀global·width
⚀global·height 
Colloquial abbr⚀glb·lg
⚀glb·wd
⚀glb·hgt
Derivation⚀velocitel × ⚀ennqua·timel 
Derivation abbr⚀veℓ × ⚀e↑tmℓ
TGM equiv

≈ 4 septqua·Grafut

TGM equiv abbr≈ 4 s↑Gf
SI & USC equiv

= 3ᘔ,600,000z=|138,848,256foot
= 13,600,000z=|3,856,896yard
= 10,497,249.7249z=|3,085,516.8English ell
= 13,275.0275z=|26,297.018
mile
= 50ᘔ5.80ᘔ5z=|8,765.672league
= 42,320,948.4288meter
= 42,320.9484288kilometer
 

scaling01:04:+:09:1.0



The ninth dozenal power of the ⚀lengthel, the ennqua·lengthel (abbreviated e↑lgℓ) is one dozen ⚀continental·lengths, or one gross regional·lengths, or one galore ⚀itineral·lengths, or one dozen galore ⚀dromal·lengths, or one bigalore ⚀morsel·lengths. An object moving at one ⚀velocitel would take a one galore days to travel this distance. In SI units, this comes out to about 42,320.9484288d≈20|~20,58.Ɛz kilometers. In USC units, this is exactly 26,297.018d=|13,275.0275z miles. This is a bit more than the circumference of the Earth. Accordingly, the proposed colloquial name this unit is the ⚀global·length.

If drawn as a circle around the Earth's center of mass, this length would correspond to an orbit at an altitude of about 368.1d268.2z kilometers, which is right in the middle of the Low Earth Orbit range. If plotted as the radius of a circle drawn around the Earth's center, it be just slightly larger than the geostationary orbit.

See Also