The question cannot be answered because you need a fixed reference point against which to measure the speed (or velocity) of the earth through the universe. What would this be? The sun (or centre of the solar system)? But that travels round the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy. The centre of Milky Way? But that travels around the centre of our local cluster. The centre of our local cluster? No, because that travels round ... and so on.
About 18 miles/sec around the sun, which is itself travelling about 30 miles/sec relative to local stars, which are traveling at about 300 miles/s relative to the galaxy centre, which is traveling at ? relative to local galaxies, which are traveling at... So the short answer is, yes.
The Sun is about 93,000,000 miles from Earth So: 93,000,000/500 = 186,000 hours
The moon's distance from Earth doesn't depend on the speed of the vehicle. It's still averages about 238,000 miles.
The universe expands 45 miles every second.
First, you would measure the diameter of the Universe in miles, or its volume in cubic miles; but what would you want to measure in square miles?Second, the size of the Universe is not currently known. The observable Universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years. Convert that to kilometers or miles if you like. One light-year is about 10 million million kilometers. But the entire Universe is probably much, much bigger.First, you would measure the diameter of the Universe in miles, or its volume in cubic miles; but what would you want to measure in square miles?Second, the size of the Universe is not currently known. The observable Universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years. Convert that to kilometers or miles if you like. One light-year is about 10 million million kilometers. But the entire Universe is probably much, much bigger.First, you would measure the diameter of the Universe in miles, or its volume in cubic miles; but what would you want to measure in square miles?Second, the size of the Universe is not currently known. The observable Universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years. Convert that to kilometers or miles if you like. One light-year is about 10 million million kilometers. But the entire Universe is probably much, much bigger.First, you would measure the diameter of the Universe in miles, or its volume in cubic miles; but what would you want to measure in square miles?Second, the size of the Universe is not currently known. The observable Universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years. Convert that to kilometers or miles if you like. One light-year is about 10 million million kilometers. But the entire Universe is probably much, much bigger.
About 8,750 miles.
About 18 miles/sec around the sun, which is itself travelling about 30 miles/sec relative to local stars, which are traveling at about 300 miles/s relative to the galaxy centre, which is traveling at ? relative to local galaxies, which are traveling at... So the short answer is, yes.
250000 miles
The Earth is 93,000,000 miles from the Sun, on the edge of the Milky Way galaxy, in the Virgo supercluster.
The circumference of the Earth is roughly 24,900 miles.
About 106 years at 100 miles per hour.
The Sun is about 93,000,000 miles from Earth So: 93,000,000/500 = 186,000 hours
The Earth's diameter is 7926.28 miles at the equator and 7899.8 miles at the poles.
An approximation: it went 350,000,000 miles in about 8 months or 240 days, and 24 hrs in an earth day, so it must have been traveling at about 64,000 miles/hr.
About 59 years.
Answer The speed in orbit is around 17500 miles an hour.
Traveling Miles was created in 1997-12.