Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, the sun is about 93 million miles away from Earth. If you're cruising at 25,000 miles per hour, it would take you roughly 3,720 hours to travel one million miles. Multiply that by 93, and you've got about 345,960 hours to reach the sun. So, like, pack some snacks and maybe a good playlist for the trip.
If one was to fly directly to Saturn (not a more realistic orbital path) the distance ranges from 743 million miles to a bit more than 1 billion miles, depending on where earth and Saturn are in their respective elliptical orbits. Using the average distance of about 875 million miles and dividing by 25,000 miles per hour we get 35,000 hours, which is 1458 days, which is about 3.99 years. Although this trajectory and speed are not realistic, the Voyager 2 spacecraft took almost exactly 4 years to reach Saturn in 1977 - 1981.
Really? ... 8 MILES PER HOUR! The would travel EIGHT MILES IN AN HOUR!
approx. 805,000 years
The mean distance from the Sun to Neptune is 4550,000000 km The mean distance from the Sun to Earth is 150,000000 million km This means the mean distance from Earth to Neptune is 4400,000000 km Convert to miles: divide by 1.609 to get 2734,617700 miles Divide by 25000 miles per hour and you get 109384.7 hours or just under 12.5 years. ■
It would be 90 miles per hour
The average distance from the earth to the moon is approx 250000 miles. If you could travel to the moon at 25000 in a staright line, it would take 10 hours.
The Earth spins roughly 1,000 miles per hour at the equator. Over the course of one day, this would be about 24,000 miles.
416 years 4.8 months at 100 miles per hour.
It would take approximately 11 years to travel from Earth to Uranus at a speed of 25,000 mph. Due to the vast distance between the two planets, even at such a high speed, the journey would still be quite long.
The average distance from Earth to Venus is 93,205,678.8 miles. It would take 93,205.7 hours or about 10.6 years to get there at 1,000 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.
If one was to fly directly to Saturn (not a more realistic orbital path) the distance ranges from 743 million miles to a bit more than 1 billion miles, depending on where earth and Saturn are in their respective elliptical orbits. Using the average distance of about 875 million miles and dividing by 25,000 miles per hour we get 35,000 hours, which is 1458 days, which is about 3.99 years. Although this trajectory and speed are not realistic, the Voyager 2 spacecraft took almost exactly 4 years to reach Saturn in 1977 - 1981.
257.99 years (rounded)
Jupiter is, on average, about 484 million miles from the sun. Traveling at a speed of 1000 miles per hour, it would take over 550 years to travel from the sun to Jupiter.
Really? ... 8 MILES PER HOUR! The would travel EIGHT MILES IN AN HOUR!
Asumming your "moonwalking" at 2.0 miles an hour. You would get there in: 2.385 Billion years.
It would take about 120 years