It's the same all day. If it's traveling through empty space,
it covers 16,094,799,110 miles in that length of time.
The speed of light is constant and does not directly affect the length of the day. The length of a day is determined by the time it takes for the Earth to complete one full rotation on its axis, which is approximately 24 hours. This rotation period is independent of the speed of light.
Light travels at a speed of about 186,282 miles per second in a vacuum. In one day, light can travel a distance of approximately 5.88 trillion miles.
Light will travel 24x3600x3E8 = 25.92 Biillion kilometers in one day (24 hours).
No. Not even one thousandth of the speed of light.
The speed of light contains distance and time, it compares how far a photon goes in a unit of time. If I understand you correctly, you are looking to compare such a relationship to time once again. Like a hypothetical spaceship traveling faster than the speed of light. If it travels one light year in a day instead of a year, that would be a light-year per day, or say, 365 lights.
Recent experiments at CERN suggest that neutrinos travel faster than light, but this experiment has not been replicated anywhere else and needs significant backing before it is to be accepted as a phenomenon.
No, day and night have nothing to do with it. Light travels as far - and as fast - during the day than during the night.No, day and night have nothing to do with it. Light travels as far - and as fast - during the day than during the night.No, day and night have nothing to do with it. Light travels as far - and as fast - during the day than during the night.No, day and night have nothing to do with it. Light travels as far - and as fast - during the day than during the night.
A light day is the distance that light travels in one day in a vacuum. Since light travels at approximately 299,792 kilometers per second (about 186,282 miles per second), a light day is roughly 25.9 billion kilometers, or about 16.1 billion miles. This distance is calculated by multiplying the speed of light by the number of seconds in a day (86,400).
One Light Year at Snail Speed was created in 2003.
186000 miles speed of light per second x 60 seconds in a minute x 60 minutes in one hour x 24 hours in one day = 16'070'400'000
Not with our current mass, it would take too long to accelerate to that speed while also not killing us to make it worth doing.
i dont think there is one