Just divide the distance by the speed. If the distance is in miles, and the speed in miles/hour, the time will be in hours - which you can then easily convert to days.
The speed of the light is 3.10^8 miles per second.what is the speed in miles per hour
Spacecraft never travel in straight lines, but for this exercise, we'll assume that we do.The distance between earth and Venus varies between 25.8 million miles and 160.2 million miles.At the speed of 25,000 miles per hour, the shorter distance takes 43 days, and the longer distance takes 267 days.
Eighty. That is what "miles per hour" means. It means how many miles you will go in one hour, if you keep going at that speed.
The rotational surface speed at the equator is approximately 1000 mph
If an amusement park has a top speed of 607,200 feet per hour, then its speed in miles per hour is 115.
3.229 miles/hour
Divide the distance by the speed.
Abut 7 miles per hour.
28 miles above earth 17,000 miles an hour
The Moon orbits Earth at a steady speed an average speed of 2288 miles per hour or 3683 kilometres per hour.
The linear speed of the Earth's rotation at any latitude can be calculated by multiplying the cosine of the latitude by the equatorial rotational speed of the Earth, which is approximately 1670 kilometers per hour (1037 miles per hour). At latitude 60.24 degrees north, the linear speed of the Earth's rotation would be approximately 835 kilometers per hour (519 miles per hour).
6200 miles per day = 258.3 miles/hour.
155/156 days
Distances between to places on earth and speed (miles per hour).
Divide the distance by the speed. If the distance is in miles, and the speed in miles/hour, the answer will be in hours. You may want to convert this to days, or to years, in this case.
The sun is moving through the galaxy at about a half a million miles per hour. Earth orbits the sun at about an eighth of that speed and the Milkyway Galaxy is moving at about a million miles per hour. Earths rotational speed is comparatively irrelevant. (about 1000 miles per hour) So earth is moving between .5 and 1.5 million miles per hour or .2% to .5% of the speed of light
The speed of rotation is greatest at the equator; 1038 miles per hour.