A train traveling at 460 watts from England by the circumference of the city of Wisconsin terminated an airspeed to ground rate ratio.In what city in France would the trains collide?

Omelette du Fromage?

Spped is not measured in watts and Wisconsin is not a city. Please don't waste our time.

Watts is not a speed. Wisconsin is not a city. There is no such thing a a ground-rate ratio. You can't go from England to France by train, and there was never a second train.

Oh and trains have nothing to do with airspeed..

To answer this question, we need to clarify a few things. First, we cannot measure a train's speed using watts, as watt is a unit of power, not speed. Speed is usually measured in units like kilometers per hour (km/h) or miles per hour (mph). Additionally, the circumference of a city is not a standard unit of measurement, so we cannot determine a train's location based on that.

If you provide the speed of the train and the time it takes for the train to travel from England to Wisconsin, I can help you calculate the distance traveled. Then, we can determine how far the train would have traveled in the same amount of time in France, given the speed ratio you mentioned. Based on that, we can estimate where the trains would collide.