Oh, what a wonderful question, my friend! The distance from Earth to the Moon and then back again is approximately 480,000 miles or 770,000 kilometers round trip. That's quite a journey the spacecraft took, filled with so many beautiful sights along the way.
The total distance traveled by Apollo 11 to the Moon and back was approximately 477,800 miles (768,000 kilometers).
As of September 2021, around 580 people have traveled into space. This includes astronauts, cosmonauts, and space tourists who have flown to space on various missions and spacecraft.
The total distance Apollo astronauts traveled to the moon and back was approximately 477,000 miles (768,800 kilometers). The one-way distance from Earth to the moon is about 238,855 miles (384,400 kilometers).
Remember, the question is how many miles has the Voyager 1 spacecraft traveled, (Not how far is it from the sun or Earth). Voyager 1 left Earth on 09/05/1977 and today is 06/28/2013. That is approximately 35 3/4th years. In October of 1978, Voyager 1 was traveling at a speed of 34,422 mph, 55397 kph. By March 1979 she had increased her speed to a top speed of 82,935 mph, 133471 kph during her fly by of Jupiter. There are current readings that Voyager 1 is now traveling at a diminishing speed of 37,500 mph, 60,350kph. After all the calculations of the speed differential and speed duration, the average speed is calculated to 37,900 mph. That would mean that the approximate total miles that Voyager 1 has traveled is 11,869,770,400 miles or 19,102,543km. Now the distance from the Sun to Voyager 1 is approximately 122 AUs (Astronomical units). An AU is the distance from the Earth to the sun and that is approximately 92,955,807 miles, 149597870 km which would make the distance from the sun to Voyager 1, 11,340,608,454 miles.
Steve Fossett holds the Absolute World Distance Record in hot air balloon travel with a distance of 14,235.33 statute miles. In 2002, Fossett completed the RTW challenge, navigating a hot air balloon around the world for a total of five times.
yard
The object's total distance traveled divided by the total time it traveled is its average speed.
Speed = Distance/Time
correct
5 x 9.1 = 45.5 metres in total.
No. The total distance traveled divided by constant speed is the time interval.
Average velocity.
speed
average speed
Total distance traveled / time
The total distance traveled by Apollo 11 to the Moon and back was approximately 477,800 miles (768,000 kilometers).
the rate of speed