How far is Aizawl from Qingdao?
The distance between Qingdao (Qingdao Liuting International Airport) and Aizawl (Lengpui Airport) is 1861 miles / 2995 kilometers / 1617 nautical miles.
The driving distance from Qingdao (TAO) to Aizawl (AJL) is 2720 miles / 4378 kilometers, and travel time by car is about 52 hours 22 minutes.
Qingdao Liuting International Airport – Lengpui Airport
Search flights
Distance from Qingdao to Aizawl
There are several ways to calculate the distance from Qingdao to Aizawl. Here are two standard methods:
Vincenty's formula (applied above)- 1860.853 miles
- 2994.752 kilometers
- 1617.037 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- 1859.192 miles
- 2992.080 kilometers
- 1615.594 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 Qingdao to Aizawl?
The estimated flight time from Qingdao Liuting International Airport to Lengpui Airport is 4 hours and 1 minutes.
What is the time difference between Qingdao and Aizawl?
Flight carbon footprint between Qingdao Liuting International Airport (TAO) and Lengpui Airport (AJL)
On average, flying from Qingdao to Aizawl generates about 205 kg of CO2 per passenger, and 205 kilograms equals 452 pounds (lbs). The figures are estimates and include only the CO2 generated by burning jet fuel.
Map of flight path and driving directions from Qingdao to Aizawl
See the map of the shortest flight path between Qingdao Liuting International Airport (TAO) and Lengpui Airport (AJL).
Airport information
Origin | Qingdao Liuting International Airport |
---|---|
City: | Qingdao |
Country: | China |
IATA Code: | TAO |
ICAO Code: | ZSQD |
Coordinates: | 36°15′57″N, 120°22′26″E |
Destination | Lengpui Airport |
---|---|
City: | Aizawl |
Country: | India |
IATA Code: | AJL |
ICAO Code: | VELP |
Coordinates: | 23°50′26″N, 92°37′10″E |