Time = Distance/Speed = 10/40 = 0.25 hours = 15 minutes.
Assuming constant speed without stopping, 6.8 hours, or 6:48.
That will entirely depend on the speed at which you're traveling. If, somehow, you're moving at the speed of light, then the sun is 8.3 minutes away. If you're driving 60 miles per hour, then the sun is 176.8 years away by the most direct route. If your speed is somewhere between 60 mph and the speed of light, then the time required to reach the sun will be somewhere between 8.3 minutes and 176.8 years.
The speed of light is constant, regardless of how far it is from its source.
262/65, assuming constant speed and no stops, = 4.03076923 hrs. Or 4hrs 2 min
31 minutes.
well the speed of light is roughly 186000 miles/second so you would be about 22766400000 miles away
The answer depends on your speed.
5 hours, that's with no working out
If the mare is on earth, she's probably somewhere near 93,000,000 miles away from the sun.
when something moves with constant angular speed (w), as in a rotating disk, the speed (v) as you move away from the center depends on distance (r), but the angular speed does not. Mathematically, v = wr.
It indicates that the obect is moving, in a radial direct (towards or away from the point of reference) at a constant speed. That speed can be 0.
It means a constant acceleration: * If the line slopes up, the object is getting faster at a constant rate; * if it slopes down, the object is getting slower at a constant rate; * If the line is horizontal, the object is neither speeding up nor slowing down, but travelling with a constant speed.