answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Since a billion light years is 1000 times a million, that means that you simply have to multiply 1000 x 22 km/sec, with a result of 22,000 km/sec.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: According to Hubble's law with H0 equals 22km per s per million-light-years what is the recessional velocity of a galaxy at a distance of 1 billion light years?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Natural Sciences

What is average velocity?

Average velocity is def.ined as the ratio of total displacement to total time taken.


What is the time when you are given velocity and distance?

Velocity is in distance/time, so multiplied by 1/distance would give you 1/time. Hope this helps!


Calculate distance from a velocity time graph?

The area between the graph and the x-axis is the distance moved. If the velocity is constant the v vs t graph is a straight horizontal line. The shape of the area under the graph is a rectangle. For constant velocity, distance = V * time. Time is the x-axis and velocity is the y-axis. If the object is accelerating, the velocity is increasing at a constant rate. The graph is a line whose slope equals the acceleration. The shape of the graph is a triangle. The area under the graph is ½ * base * height. The base is time, and the height is the velocity. If the initial velocity is 0, the average velocity is final velocity ÷ 2. Distance = average velocity * time. Distance = (final velocity ÷ 2) * time, time is on the x-axis, and velocity is on the y-axis. (final velocity ÷ 2) * time = ½ time * final velocity ...½ base * height = ½ time * final velocity Area under graph = distance moved Most velocity graphs are horizontal lines or sloping lines.


How is the velocity-time graph related to the distance traveled?

The product of velocity and time yields distance travelled if the velocity is constant for the time in question. If velocity is not constant, one must first calculate the average velocity over a given time period before multiplying it by the time involved.


If an object is accelerating what equation relates the distance traveled by that object to the initial velocity final velocity and time?

Final velocity = Initial velocity +(acceleration * time)