Spacecraft never travel in straight lines, but for this exercise, we'll assume that we do.
The distance between earth and Venus varies between 25.8 million miles and 160.2 million miles.
At the speed of 25,000 miles per hour, the shorter distance takes 43 days, and the longer distance takes 267 days.
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If one was to fly directly to Saturn (not a more realistic orbital path) the distance ranges from 743 million miles to a bit more than 1 billion miles, depending on where earth and Saturn are in their respective elliptical orbits. Using the average distance of about 875 million miles and dividing by 25,000 miles per hour we get 35,000 hours, which is 1458 days, which is about 3.99 years. Although this trajectory and speed are not realistic, the Voyager 2 spacecraft took almost exactly 4 years to reach Saturn in 1977 - 1981.
The Sun is about 93,000,000 miles from Earth So: 93,000,000/500 = 186,000 hours
About 10.6 years. The sun is about 93million miles away, thus: time ~= 93000000 miles ÷ 1000 mph = 93000 hours = 3875 days ~= 10.6 years.
That would depend on where you started from.
Not sure about "that" star, but it would take about 3700 hours (0.42 years) to reach the sun, our nearest star. The journey to next nearest, Proxima Centauri, would take around 114000 years.
The average distance from the earth to the moon is approx 250000 miles. If you could travel to the moon at 25000 in a staright line, it would take 10 hours.
Moscow is on the Volga River
About 1,350,000 miles per hour or 2,175,000 kilometers per hour
Omaha, NE to the west, Pittsburgh, PA to the east, Nashville, TN to the south and Duluth, MN to the north.
It would take 4,620,000,000.
The time it takes to reach a destination traveling at 65 miles per hour.
If one was to fly directly to Saturn (not a more realistic orbital path) the distance ranges from 743 million miles to a bit more than 1 billion miles, depending on where earth and Saturn are in their respective elliptical orbits. Using the average distance of about 875 million miles and dividing by 25,000 miles per hour we get 35,000 hours, which is 1458 days, which is about 3.99 years. Although this trajectory and speed are not realistic, the Voyager 2 spacecraft took almost exactly 4 years to reach Saturn in 1977 - 1981.
The Sun is about 93,000,000 miles from Earth So: 93,000,000/500 = 186,000 hours
Both of two planets travel in ellipses around the sun, and so the distance between them is constantly shifting. At its farthest, Venus lies 162 million miles (261 million kilometers) away, While at nearest Venus lies 25 million miles (40 million km).though it can reach as close as 24 million miles (38 million km).
As fast as you'd like, but if you were traveling at the speed of light, you'd be there in about 8 minutes and 30 seconds. If you were traveling at a speed of about 60 miles per hour, you'd be there in about 167 years.
At Venus' closest distance from Earth of about 23.7 million miles, it would take at least 1 year 4 months to get there at 2,000 mph.
It takes 53 minutes 20 seconds