For example, if a star is at a distance of 5 light-years, it will take 5 years to travel there at the speed of light.
You can use both variations. Wiktionary lists "time-travel" as an alternative spelling to "time travel", so it seems "time travel" is the more common version.
It is a machine where you can travel through time and travel any time you want it to go like the past or the future. Usually when your in either time you might see yourself older or younger and meet yourself if you know where they are so you can get to know yourself older or younger.
Any link between time travel and chemistry.
Stephen Hawking was skeptical about the possibility of time travel. Although he found the idea intriguing, he believed that time travel to the past was likely impossible due to the lack of evidence and logical paradoxes it would entail. However, he considered the notion of traveling to the future as theoretically feasible through concepts like wormholes and time dilation.
At night...
if you are looking for him the first time then he is in the zoo. if you are looking for him the 2nd time then he is at the ski lifts in the moring go there through the star gazing plateau.
staring in one direction for an extended period of time.
no Theoretically, if you could travel faster than the speed of light, you could go back in time. When you look through a telescope at a distant star, you are looking back in time because the light from the star, that you are seeing now, may have taken hundreds of years to travel from the star to your eye. If you can travel faster than light, you could travel to the star and arrive before the light you're seeing now left the star in the first place. Therefore you travelled to a time previous to when the light left.
For example, if a star is at a distance of 5 light-years, it will take 5 years to travel there at the speed of light.
Sirius is a single star, in the constellation Canis Major, just east of Orion. It's visible at some time of night during roughly 9 months of the year. The best time of year to see it depends entirely on what time of night you like to go outside and look. If you're like most people, and do your gazing between dinnner and bed-time, then Winter and early Spring are the best seasons.
a log (off Jim) some rope (by playing basket ball 1 player (time travel!!) and a screwdriver, scissors and drill all in one (you get it automatically when you star the game (time travel)
I found mecha-dog as I was going through the star-gazing plateau to the ski slope in the morning. If you go through you will hopefully see mecha-dog straight away. Hope this helped!!!!
travel in time
travel in time
travel in time
It depends how fast you are travelling, and also how long ago the star died; assuming the star JUST died, if you travel there and back at twice the speed of light, you will see it just as it disappears, travel any slower and it will be gone when you get back.However if the star died, say, 10 light years ago, and the distance between earth and the star is 20 light years, you will have to travel at 4 times the speed of light to get back in time to see it disappear.