The distance a meteorite travels in a year can vary greatly depending on its starting point and trajectory. On average, meteorites in our solar system can travel anywhere from a few kilometers to millions of kilometers in a year.
About 9.45 trillion kilometers (5.88 trillion miles) per year if you mean how far can light (including the sun's light) travel in a year. 365 days/year * 86,400 seconds/day * 299,792 km/s = 9.45 x 10^12 km/year
No. Meteorite showers make colored lines in the sky as they burn up in the atmosphere. You can see them with the naked eye but it is easier if you are far away from cities so the sky is darker.
It is the distance travelled by light in one year at a speed of 186,000 miles per second
A meteorite that originates from Mars.
A light year is a unit of space, not time. It is the distance light travels in a year. Eris is far less than a light year away.
a year
It can travel about 5.86 trillion miles in one year. This is a light year.
The largest known meteorite is the Hoba meteorite. It landed on the farm "Hoba West", not far from Grootfontein, in the Otjozondjupa Region of Namibia.
About 150,000 miles in a year. :)
how far u can travel at the speed of light in a year
None: A meteorite is a meteoroid that has reached Earths surface.
1858
in the middle of winter.
Big Ben's minute hands travel approximately 190km every year.
22,000-mile, 13-year march
A light year is a measure of how far light can travel in one year. It is a phenomenal distance, and is used to describe how far away stars are from us.
Your question seems to suggest that you think a "light year"is a length of time. It's not.It's a distance ... the distance light travels in a year.The distance is about 5,878,450,000,000 miles.I cannot travel nearly that far in one year.