The Earth travels approximately 940 million kilometers (584 million miles) around the Sun in one week as it completes one full orbit.
It takes Earth approximately 24 hours to complete one full rotation on its axis, causing day and night cycles.
One day on Jupiter is approximately 9.9 hours, while a week on Earth is 7 days. To convert to Earth days, you would need to multiply Jupiter days by Earth days, leading to approximately 13.5 days passing on Jupiter in one Earth week.
13.369 rotations, and 12.368 cycles of phases.
Earth rotates on its axis approximately 7 times in one week.
No. The distance to the Moon and back is 500,000 miles, which would take 10 days (500,000 divided by 50,000), which is more than a week (7 days).Or, to put it another way, the trip there takes 250,000 miles/ 50,000 miles a day = 5 days, so for the week you would only have 2 days left (7-5) and it takes 5 days, at the same speed, to get back.
29.782Mph
30 days
How far does light travel in one hour
Well Earth is part of the Universe and one can travel round Earth by walking. To travel to parts of our own solar system one would need a space ship. As far as we know it would take more than a human lifetime to travel to the nearest star to the Sun.
Pretty far
it can travel nothing
Pluto orbits at about 4.666 km/sTherefore in one "Earth day", Pluto travels:24,188,544 km in one day15,030,064 miles in one day
7 rotations of the earth
"Distance" means how far two object are from one another. In this case, how far the Moon is from Earth, or how far the Sun is from Earth.
It takes Earth approximately 24 hours to complete one full rotation on its axis, causing day and night cycles.
YES,IF IS ONE WEEK AFTER YOU COME BACK>
light can travel around earth about seven times