Distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Beijing Capital International Airport
JNG-PEK
- The distance between [1]Jining Qufu Airport and [2]Beijing Capital International Airport is 532.713 Kilometers or 331.012 Miles.
To check the distance from Jining Qufu Airport to other airports, please click here.
To view the distance from Jining Qufu Airport to the Busiest Airports, please click here.
Airport[1] Jining Qufu AirportIATA Airport Code: JNG
ICAO Airport Code: ZSJG
Asia -> China -> Jining
Medium Airport
Latitude: 35.292778
Longitude: 116.346667
Elevation: 134
Airport[2] Beijing Capital International AirportIATA Airport Code: PEK
ICAO Airport Code: ZBAA
Asia -> China -> Beijing
Large Airport
Latitude: 40.08010101
Longitude: 116.5849991
Elevation: 116
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Shenzhen Bao'an International Airport is 1428.23 Kilometers or 887.46 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Shanghai Pudong International Airport is 685.81 Kilometers or 426.14 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Dongshan Airport is 1572.713 Kilometers or 977.239 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Erenhot Saiwusu International Airport is 974.633 Kilometers or 605.609 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Yaoqiang Airport is 191 Kilometers or 118 Miles.
The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Zhengzhou Xinzheng International Airport is 244 Kilometers or 152 Miles.
The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Taiyuan Wusu Airport is 430 Kilometers or 267 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Changzhi Airport is 309.319 Kilometers or 192.202 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Zhangjiakou Ningyuan Airport is 618.078 Kilometers or 384.056 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Yantai Laishan Airport is 507.372 Kilometers or 315.266 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Lindu Airport is 1736.475 Kilometers or 1078.995 Miles.
- The distance between Jining Qufu Airport and Yushu Batang Airport is 1796.571 Kilometers or 1116.338 Miles.
The airport distance calculator is provided for informational purposes only. The calculations are approximate in nature and may differ a little from the distances as given in the official forecasts and advisories.
A geographic coordinate system is a coordinate system that enables every location on the Earth to be specified by a set of numbers and/or letters. The coordinates are often chosen such that one of the numbers represents vertical position, and two or three of the numbers represent horizontal position. A common choice of coordinates is latitude, longitude and elevation.
Online Tools