Not that we know of. There are likely to be serious problems associated with time travel. Such as paradoxes. If a "time travel box" had been developed, it is probable that a future civilization would have travelled back in time to eliminate its invention and these paradoxes. [Which poses its own problems for the traveller!]
I rather like the definition of time attributed to Ray Cummings in 1922; "Time is that which prevents everything from happening at once."
No the traveled in space alone.
at any one time there are almost 30 lightning strikes in the world
15
No, it is not possible to determine the speed of someone in space based on the information given. To calculate speed, we need to know the distance traveled and the time it took to travel that distance, and in this case, we don't have either of those values. We know that one year on the spaceship is equal to 50000 years on Earth, but that does not provide us with any information about the speed of the spaceship.
The greatest distance a tornado is recorded to have traveled is 219 miles.
Rate of travel = (distance traveled) divided by (time traveled)
revolution
No the traveled in space alone.
No one has traveled through time before. In stories, people travel through time in a time machine.
There are two ways to find the distance traveled. One is to measure the distance traveled. The other is to measure the distance raveled within a certain amount of time and then multiply to find how far it will travel in the future.
The fifth Doctor (Peter Davison) traveled with three companions at once, Tegan, Nyssa and Adric from Castrovalva through to Earthshock.
Balboa traveled many routes during his time as an explorer. One of the better known was when he traveled across what is now Panama to enter the South Seas.
One formula that is often used is: distance = speed x time
The speed the vehicle is traveling in MPH and KPH. Also the total miles traveled by the vehicle is recorded by the odometer. It also will have a resetable trip meter that will record miles traveled at any given time.
Albert Einstien
Nobody has traveled in time so far. Time travel is in the realm of science fiction; it hasn't been achieved in real life.
Yes.