Assuming speed of light at 300,000 km/sec, answer is 30 years. 10 light years = 300,000 x 3600 x 24 x 365 x 10 = 9.4608 x 1013 km t = 9.4608 x 1013 / 100,000 = 948.08 x 106 seconds 948.08 x 106 / 3600 / 24 / 365 = 30 years I'll do some rounding. Light travels at 299,792.458. we'll round to 300,000 km/s because at these speeds, an extra 207 miles in a second is just pointless to calculate. Your ship travels at 100,000 km/s So the short way to do this is simple. Your ship travels 100,000 kms while light is 300,000 kms so your ship travels 1/3 the speed of light. (100,000/300,000 = 1/3) So it's safe to say that it will take 3 times as long for your ship to get anywhere no matter how far it is. So if light travels a distance of 10 light years - it will take your ship 30 light years to get there. Of course you could go the long way - 300,000 mps x 60 secs x 60 minutes x 365.25days equals the distance of km in 1 light year - x10 for the total distance in km. Then divide that by 100,000 km sec to see how long it will take you to go that distance. But that's just too much work - which is why we use light-years as a distance measurement. And when you go to Mars probably in the year 3000, you will probably found that it has changed form in imagination and starts to form like earth...
At its farthest, Venus is about 261 million km from Earth. If you averaged 11.2km/s the trip would take a minimum of 1.2 years.
Columbus said the earth was sphere when he traveled to America
If air resistance can be ignored, the distance in meters is 4.9t2. Note that 4.9 is half the numerical value of Earth's acceleration (9.8 meters per second square).
240000
If the length of the second pendulum of the earth is about 1 meter, the length of the second pendulum should be between 0.3 and 0.5 meters.
Apollo 12 traveled to the moon and back to earth.
29.782Mph
Humans are already on planet Earth... we don't need to 'travel' to Earth. Humans already fare quite well on planet earth.
In a straight line, half a million miles. But you can't do it in a straight line.
light can travel around earth about seven times
Relative to the sun, the the earth and everything on it is 2 astronomical units away from the location it was 6 months ago. But since it didn't travel in a straight line, the actual distance traveled is somewhat greater.
Currently, the farthest a human has traveled into space is about 400,000 kilometers. That is the distance from the Earth to the Moon.
About 30 km/second.
depends on what wave where you are however if you are on about space it wont travel because of low presser meaning no air force. but on earth sond waves can reach 100000 km
The distance light must travel is the distance from Sun to Earth - about 150 million km.
Just sitting still you are actually moving quite fast through space. The Earth's in its journey around the Sun moves a little under 67,000 mph - about 18.5 miles per second. But our Solar system is also in orbit around the galactic center - at about 143 miles per second. Our Milky Way is also in motion about a common center of gravity of a group of galaxies - the Local Cluster - and that cluster also is in motion - which adds a speed of about 372 miles per second.
I'm not sure of the exact name, but in Star Trek: Voyager they found out that a species of dinosaurs left Earth via space travel and traveled to the Delta Quadrant.