Air Miles Calculator logo

How far is Tame from Wuhan?

The distance between Wuhan (Wuhan Tianhe International Airport) and Tame (Gabriel Vargas Santos Airport) is 9840 miles / 15835 kilometers / 8550 nautical miles.

Wuhan Tianhe International Airport – Gabriel Vargas Santos Airport

Distance arrow
9840
Miles
Distance arrow
15835
Kilometers
Distance arrow
8550
Nautical miles
Flight time duration
19 h 7 min
CO2 emission
1 276 kg

Search flights

Distance from Wuhan to Tame

There are several ways to calculate the distance from Wuhan to Tame. Here are two standard methods:

Vincenty's formula (applied above)
  • 9839.684 miles
  • 15835.437 kilometers
  • 8550.452 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
  • 9834.007 miles
  • 15826.300 kilometers
  • 8545.519 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 Wuhan to Tame?

The estimated flight time from Wuhan Tianhe International Airport to Gabriel Vargas Santos Airport is 19 hours and 7 minutes.

Flight carbon footprint between Wuhan Tianhe International Airport (WUH) and Gabriel Vargas Santos Airport (TME)

On average, flying from Wuhan to Tame generates about 1 276 kg of CO2 per passenger, and 1 276 kilograms equals 2 814 pounds (lbs). The figures are estimates and include only the CO2 generated by burning jet fuel.

Map of flight path from Wuhan to Tame

See the map of the shortest flight path between Wuhan Tianhe International Airport (WUH) and Gabriel Vargas Santos Airport (TME).

Airport information

Origin Wuhan Tianhe International Airport
City: Wuhan
Country: China Flag of China
IATA Code: WUH
ICAO Code: ZHHH
Coordinates: 30°47′1″N, 114°12′28″E
Destination Gabriel Vargas Santos Airport
City: Tame
Country: Colombia Flag of Colombia
IATA Code: TME
ICAO Code: SKTM
Coordinates: 6°27′3″N, 71°45′37″W