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How far is Grenoble from Papeete?

The distance between Papeete (Faa'a International Airport) and Grenoble (Alpes–Isère Airport) is 10035 miles / 16150 kilometers / 8720 nautical miles.

Faa'a International Airport – Alpes–Isère Airport

Distance arrow
10035
Miles
Distance arrow
16150
Kilometers
Distance arrow
8720
Nautical miles
Flight time duration
19 h 29 min
CO2 emission
1 307 kg

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Distance from Papeete to Grenoble

There are several ways to calculate the distance from Papeete to Grenoble. Here are two standard methods:

Vincenty's formula (applied above)
  • 10035.004 miles
  • 16149.773 kilometers
  • 8720.180 nautical miles

Vincenty's formula calculates the distance between latitude/longitude points on the earth's surface using an ellipsoidal model of the planet.

Haversine formula
  • 10034.293 miles
  • 16148.630 kilometers
  • 8719.562 nautical miles

The haversine formula calculates the distance between latitude/longitude points assuming a spherical earth (great-circle distance – the shortest distance between two points).

How long does it take to fly from Papeete to Grenoble?

The estimated flight time from Faa'a International Airport to Alpes–Isère Airport is 19 hours and 29 minutes.

Flight carbon footprint between Faa'a International Airport (PPT) and Alpes–Isère Airport (GNB)

On average, flying from Papeete to Grenoble generates about 1 307 kg of CO2 per passenger, and 1 307 kilograms equals 2 882 pounds (lbs). The figures are estimates and include only the CO2 generated by burning jet fuel.

Map of flight path from Papeete to Grenoble

See the map of the shortest flight path between Faa'a International Airport (PPT) and Alpes–Isère Airport (GNB).

Airport information

Origin Faa'a International Airport
City: Papeete
Country: French Polynesia Flag of French Polynesia
IATA Code: PPT
ICAO Code: NTAA
Coordinates: 17°33′13″S, 149°36′25″W
Destination Alpes–Isère Airport
City: Grenoble
Country: France Flag of France
IATA Code: GNB
ICAO Code: LFLS
Coordinates: 45°21′46″N, 5°19′45″E