The radius of the orbit is 238,000 miles and you have to multiply by 2 pi, which is 6.283, so the answer is 1.5 million miles.
The Earth travels approximately 1.6 million miles in a day as it orbits the Sun at an average speed of 67,000 miles per hour. This movement is part of the Earth's revolution around the Sun, which takes about 365.25 days to complete.
24,906 miles
That depends on how far you are from it in your orbit. If you're 1 million miles from the center of the sun and travel in a circle, then the length of your orbit is about 6,283,185 miles . If you're 10 million miles from the center of the sun and travel in a circle, then the length of your orbit is about 62,831,853 miles. If you're 93 million miles from the center of the sun, and travel in a circle, and start out in exactly the right place at just exactly the right time, then you'll always be pretty close to the Earth, and the length of your orbit will be about 584,336,234 miles.
2,288 miles per hour
66,600
The average speed of Earth's revolution around the sun is approximately 30 kilometers per second (67,000 miles per hour).
The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately 24,901 miles. So, if you were to travel around the world at the equator, you would travel around 24,901 miles.
you can travel around the earth 281,106.9 times, if going around the equator
it is 25,184 miles around the world sorry didn't finish answer. 25,184 miles and 16,678 nautical miles there is 1.51 nautical miles for every mile
around the world 26,000 miles
Light travels at approximately 186,282 miles per second. The circumference of the Earth is about 24,901 miles. Therefore, it would take light approximately 0.133 seconds to travel all the way around the Earth.
The distance around the Earth is roughly 24,901 miles (40,075 kilometers). This measurement is called Earth's equatorial circumference and represents the distance you would travel if you followed the equator all the way around the planet.