One degree off course is sufficient enough to get a close look of the moon.
At a typical 18.6 miles per second the spacecraft travels at 1/10,000 of the speed of light, therefore it would take 43,000 years.
Insufficient information, what of the planned range of the mission, ( seems to be a rocket or something like that) fuel capacity, specific impulse, burning time, angle of attack, too many variables to answer this ballistically- Point Blank.
Approximately three weeks at 500 miles per hour.
80 hours. It's different going from the earth to the moon because you travel along large ellipses. There is also the issue of accelerating and decelerating. If Ulysses flew by the earth and moon in a straight line, it would only take eight hours to pass.
Yes, being just 1 degree off course on a trip to the moon could result in missing the target by potentially thousands of miles. This is because even small deviations can compound over long distances in the vastness of space.
Probably not as they usually need to be within a couple of miles of a cell tower to get service. In low earth orbit the closest normal cell towers would be about 200 miles below you, well out of service range. Further out it would of course be worse. However if your spacecraft contained a cell transmitter/receiver like those in cell towers, yes the mobile phone would work while inside the spacecraft (and maybe just outside near the spacecraft).
It would take 10 seconds.
At a typical 18.6 miles per second the spacecraft travels at 1/10,000 of the speed of light, therefore it would take 43,000 years.
At the equator (25000 miles) there's about 69.4 miles per degree, so about 2222.2 miles. At the poles there would be no miles. In nautical miles it's 60 miles per degree (of latitude, which stays the same).
The time it takes to travel 1 million miles in space depends on the speed of the spacecraft. For example, if a spacecraft travels at 25,000 miles per hour, it would take approximately 40 hours to cover that distance. However, if traveling at the speed of light (about 186,282 miles per second), it would take roughly 5.3 seconds. The actual duration varies significantly based on the technology and mission profile of the spacecraft.
Insufficient information, what of the planned range of the mission, ( seems to be a rocket or something like that) fuel capacity, specific impulse, burning time, angle of attack, too many variables to answer this ballistically- Point Blank.
Approximately three weeks at 500 miles per hour.
yes you would get CEU's for the course
If you mean "minutes", there are 60 minutes of arc in one degree. If you mean "minors", there don't need to be any. A minor would be an additional course of study different from the principal course for the degree, e.g. a Bachelors degree in History with minors in Latin and Romance Languages. Seldom would there be more than two minors to go with a degree.
Bachelor's degree, and higher. Hope that was what you were looking for. You need no degree at all. There are plenty of car dealers with no college education. Of course a degree in business would be helpful.
I would be far out at sea in the Atlantic Ocean, about 1,700 miles east of Recife, Brazil, 2,440 miles northwest of Capetown, South Africa, and 5,375 miles southeast of New York City. I can promise you that I would not be happy.
It might be harder because you would have to prove to the employer why your degree is valid. You should be prepared to bring copies of course assignments, course syllabi, information about your school, etc.