This is way too wide open a question. For example, to put the shuttle one mile up is going to use a bit more energy than throwing a rock over the edge of the Grand Canyon, which would leave the rock one mile down. You could walk one mile, or transport a building or huge rocket one mile across land. These would use vastly different amounts of energy.
I am not aware that any unit of measurement called a "light mile" has ever been used. It could conceivably be a unit of time: the amount of time required for light to travel one mile, about 1/186,000th of a second.
The transformation of voltage to a higher potential ensures that energy can travel long distances
A statute mile is used as the imperial measurement primarily in the USA and UK for land based distances. The statue mile equates to 1609.3 metres to one decimal place. The nautical mile, as the name suggests, is the predominant unit of measurement in the maritime world e.g. sea travel, air travel. The nautical mile equates to exactly 1852 metres. Thus, 1 nautical mile = 1.1508 statute miles
A unit of energy such as joules, kilowatt-hours, or calories cannot be used as a physical object for energy, as they are simply standardized measures used to quantify the amount of energy in a system or process.
how solar energy is used
39800000000 % of energy is used in India everyday?
none
Battery energy can travel through electrical circuits, wires, and conductive materials to power electronic devices and systems. It is typically used to transfer energy from the battery to the component being powered.
A pax mile refers to passenger miles, which is the total number of miles that passengers travel on a particular mode of transportation. It is a common metric used to measure the usage and efficiency of transportation systems.
That would depend on how much gas the car used per mile.
An energy pyramid is used to show how much energy is used in each trophic level in an ecosystem. This pyramid represents the flow of energy from one trophic level to the next, with energy decreasing as it moves up the pyramid.
No, a joule is a unit of energy, not a form of energy itself. Energy can exist in various forms such as kinetic, potential, thermal, and chemical energy. The joule is simply a standard unit used to quantify these different forms of energy.