No. Earth cannot explode. Our planet will likely remain intact for about 5 billion years. At that point the sun will expand and probably consume Earth.
The moon is drifting away from earth at a rate of about 38 millimeters per year. So in 1 million years, the moon will have drifted another 38 kilometers or abour 24 miles further from Earth.
"Sputnik 1 burned up on January 4, 1958. It fell from orbit upon re-entering earth's atmosphere after traveling about 60 million km (37 million miles) and spending 3 months in orbit." That straight from Wikipedia. A link is provided.
The most accurate clock is an atomic clock invented at the university of Colorado in the United States.The atomic clock is accurate to within 1 second in 200 million years.
Using the "short scale" number names (new name every thousand), "one thousand million years" is a "billion years", the metric equivalent being a "gigaannum" (1 Ga). (see link)
Just like any other trip, it depends on how fast you travel. -- Walking, 3 miles per hour . . . 223.5 million years -- Driving, 60 mph . . . 11.2 million years -- Flying, 750 mph . . . 894 thousand years -- Earth's orbital speed around the sun . . . 10 thousand years -- Speed of light . . . 1 year
It is highly unlikely. A million years is a short time on a geologic timescale. Earth will remain habitable for a few hundred million years into the future.
Dinosaurs - about 150 million years. Humans - about 1 million years.
About 1141 million light-years.
1 million
1-1.8 million years ago was approximately 0.2-0.8 million years ago.
Yes, one million years is a significant period in geologic time. It is equivalent to 1/485th of the age of the Earth (4.54 billion years). In the geologic time scale, it falls within the Quaternary period, which includes the most recent 2.6 million years of Earth's history.
1 million (1000000)
The distance between the Earth and the sun is not measured in years, but in a unit called Astronomical Units (AU). One AU is approximately 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. The average distance from the Earth to the sun is about 1 AU.
I think the answer you are looking for is: 1 Million Years = 1 mellophone
One megayear, or 1 MYA (million years ago).
There are 1000 sets of 1 million years in a billion years.
Earth's oldest known rocks are about 4 billion years old. 4 percent of 4 billion years is 160 million years.