Its odometer has been damaged due to the extremely high temperature.
The Sun is approximately 93 million miles away, so it would take about 93 million hours at 1 mile per hour. That's more than 10,000 years.
Light travels at 670,616,629 miles per hour from the sun to Earth (or anyplace else in a vacuum). It takes about 8 minutes 12 seconds for the light of the sun to reach Earth.
67,062 miles per hour.
Earth orbits the sun at an average speed of about 67,000 miles per hour (107,000 kilometers per hour).
21,637 miles per hour or 34,821 kilometers per hour in its orbit around the Sun.
An average speed of 53,979 miles per hour
About 186,000 miles per hour or 300,000 kilometers per hour.
There is virtually no limit. For example, the sun consumes about 2.2 quadrillion kilograms of hydrogen per hour. And the sun is not particularly a rapid consumer of its fuel.
It's the other way around; the Earth goes around the Sun. The Earth is in an elliptical orbit (but not very elliptical; only about 3% difference from a perfect circle) so the speed of the Earth's movement around the Sun varies a bit. It's moving fastest around January 4, when the Earth is closest to the Sun (called "perihelion"), and moving slowest in early July, when the Earth is farthest away (which we call "aphelion"). But on average, it's moving about 67,000 miles per hour in its orbit.
No. That's approximately the speed at which Earth rotates. The apparent speed of the Sun can't really be expressed in miles per hour, only in degrees per hour. It is approximately 15 degrees per hour.
Venus travels around the Sun at an average speed of about 78,341 miles per hour. This speed can vary slightly depending on its position in its orbit.
depends on the size and how close it is to the sun. the closer to the sun and the smaller the faster. if it is small and far from the sun it will go slower. the closer to the sun the more gravitaional pull.