It is approximately 7,917.5 miles to dig from one side of the Earth to the other, assuming you are tunneling directly through the center of the Earth. This distance is based on the Earth's average radius of 3,959 miles.
Perhaps you have imagined digging a tunnel through the earth that comes out the other side. How many kilometers would you have to dig?
The minimum distance between Jupiter and Earth is 365 million miles (588 million km). Since one light year (the distance light travels in one year) is approximately 5,870,000,000,000 miles, the minimum distance between Jupiter and Earth is 0.0000621 light years.
The planet you are referring to is likely Earth. Earth's magnetosphere is a region of space around the planet where its magnetic field dominates the interactions with charged particles from the Sun. This region extends tens of thousands of miles into space on the side facing the Sun and millions of miles into the space on the other side.
norway
It is approximately 7,917.5 miles to dig from one side of the Earth to the other, assuming you are tunneling directly through the center of the Earth. This distance is based on the Earth's average radius of 3,959 miles.
If you went directly from where you are standing straight through the earth until you got to the other side, the distance that you would travel would be the diameter.
You'd have to say about 3,950 miles. Even if you head straight toward the center of the Earth, if you go farther than 3,950 miles from where you started, you're closer than that to the surface on the other side.
It depends on the position of the moon around the earth. if it is the other side of earth it would be further away than if it was on the side of the earth facing the sun. But it is roughly 93 million miles
Rim to Rim varies from 4 to 18 miles.
Perhaps you have imagined digging a tunnel through the earth that comes out the other side. How many kilometers would you have to dig?
== == == == == == The diameter of the earth at the equator is 7,926.41 miles (12,756.32 kilometers). But, if you measure the earth through the north and south poles the diameter is a bit shorter - 7,901 miles (12,715.43 km). Thus the earth is a tad wider (25 miles / 41 km) than it is tall, giving it a slight bulge at the equator. This shape is known as an ellipsoid or more properly, geoid (earth-like). So it just depends on which way you're digging!
Approximately 12,742 kilometers. This distance is from the surface of the Earth to the center and then to the opposite side.
Billions and billions of years....
i don t know i asked you
The minimum distance between Jupiter and Earth is 365 million miles (588 million km). Since one light year (the distance light travels in one year) is approximately 5,870,000,000,000 miles, the minimum distance between Jupiter and Earth is 0.0000621 light years.
The planet you are referring to is likely Earth. Earth's magnetosphere is a region of space around the planet where its magnetic field dominates the interactions with charged particles from the Sun. This region extends tens of thousands of miles into space on the side facing the Sun and millions of miles into the space on the other side.