With a car (60mph): 694 days
With a jumbojet (600mph): 96 days
Pedastrian (3mph): 13,889 days
Subsonic jet (1200mph): 35 days
Light speed (670615200mph): 2.5 minutes
10
1000000/1000=1000 1000/365.25~2.73785079 years
approx. 805,000 years
It all depends on your rate of speed. Say you were traveling at a speed of OVER 9000 MPH, it would take you less time to travel 120 trillion miles than 1337 MPH. 120 trillion miles is roughly 20 light years, ie it takes 20 years for light to travel that far. Voyager 1, now leaving the solar system at a speed of about 39,000 miles per hour, would need more than 300,000 years to travel that far.
Approximately 10.43 years at 17,500 mph
It would take about 25,000 years. If not 35,025 years.
(24 trillion miles) x (1609.344 meters per mile)divided by(300 million meters per second) x (86,400 seconds per day) x (365.24 days per year) =4.08 years (rounded)
around 40 or 1000-1500 days
In 20 years, light will travel 1.17569996 × 1014 miles in a vacuum.
One light year is about 6 trillion miles. So if we calculate the amount of light years, we can calculate the amount of years. In order to figure out the number of light years, we divide 11 by 6, adding trillion to our answer (6 because 1 light year is 6 trillion miles). 11 divided by 6 is about 1.83 (or 1.83 trillion). So, in conclusion, it would take light 1.83 years to travel 11 trillion miles. Another way to solve this is simply calculating the amount of time it would take light to travel 1 trillion miles and multiply that by 11. So you divide 365 (the amount of days in a year) by 6 you get 60. It would take light 60 days for light to travel 1 trillion miles. 60 times 11 is 660, so it would take 660 days (or 1.8 years) for light to travel 11 trillion miles.
93000000/70 is 1328571.43 hours or 55357.14 days or 151.56 years
222 billion miles = 0.0377647371 light years.
27,251 years.