17,987,547,480 meters
How far does light travel in one hour
It takes light exactly one hour to travel in 1 hour.
Light speed is over one billion kilometers per hour. Not only can a human not run that fast, no spaceship can ever travel that fast, at least according to the laws of physics as we currently understand them.
300000 km/second
To travel 108 miles in one hour on any highway, you would have to be traveling at a rate of speed of 108mi/h.
In a vacuum............... Light travels 299,792.458 km per second In one minute light travels 17,987,547.48 km. In one hour light travels 1,079,252,849 km. In one year roughly 9.5 x 10*12
Yes, it is - in vacuum.
Depends on your speed. A light year is the distance light travels in a year. If you traveled slower it would take longer.Depends on the speed you are going.At the speed of light one year.See related question for details of a light yearJust like any other distance, it depends on the speed of travel.-- At the speed of light, radio, x-rays, etc., it takes 1 year.-- At 1 million miles per hour, it takes about 671 years.-- At 60 miles per hour, it takes about 11.2 million years.A light year is the distance that light will travel in one year in a vacuum. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second. So, light will travel about 5.8 trillion miles in one year. Now, to answer the question. The answer depends on how fast you are traveling. If you were in a space ship travelling 99.9999% the speed of light, it would take you about a year to travel a light year. Now, there is currently no human-made space craft, that we know of, that can travel that fast. The space shuttle travels at about 17,500 miles per hour. In order for the space shuttle to travel one light year, it would take about 38,262 years.
Light travels at a speed of about 186,282 miles per second in a vacuum. In one day, light can travel a distance of approximately 5.88 trillion miles.
Lightning can travel at speeds of up to 220,000 miles per hour, making it one of the fastest natural phenomena on Earth.
Light travels fastest in vacuum. It can never go quicker than that (this is one of the postulates of special relativity).
About 245.45 miles per hour at 360ft/s