1.6 million miles
Earth travels about 1.6 million miles around the sun in one day.
The Earth travels about 92 million miles in its orbit around the sun each day.
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.
It varies from day to day, but always near 250,000 miles.
To convert 1275 furlongs per Jupiter day into mph, we need to consider the length of a Jupiter day. A day on Jupiter is approximately 9.9 Earth hours. First, convert furlongs to miles (1 furlong is 0.125 miles), then divide the distance by the length of a Jupiter day to find the speed in mph. So, 1275 furlongs/day * 0.125 miles/furlong = 159 miles/day, and 159 miles/day / 9.9 hours/day = approximately 16.06 mph.
Earth travels about 1.6 million miles around the sun in one day.
on average they can travel 1000 miles....in one day
518 miles.
Relative to the center of the earth or the north pole, roughly 424,000 miles for every day it's in orbit.
That depends on who you are and how much you can travel in a day. For me and my family it's around a thousand miles.
To travel to WHERE?
About 150 miles
116
The Earth travels about 92 million miles in its orbit around the sun each day.
fifteen
400 miles!
Assuming you mean an Earth Day and not a Venus day. Venus has an orbital speed of 35.02 km/s or 21.76 miles/s So there are 86,400 seconds in an Earth day. 21.76 x 86,400 gives the answer. ---------------------------------------------- For a Venus day. There are 20,996,928 seconds in a Venus day 21.76 x 20,996,928 gives the answer.