It depends on your mode of transport. Astronauts/cosmonauts on the International Space Station travelled thousand of kilometres in a day, where on foot you would be doing well to exceed 150.
1,296,000 miles
The Earth spins roughly 1,000 miles per hour at the equator. Over the course of one day, this would be about 24,000 miles.
I dOnt know but a mountain lion can travel up to 25miles per day at night.
That depends on how far you are from it in your orbit. If you're 1 million miles from the center of the sun and travel in a circle, then the length of your orbit is about 6,283,185 miles . If you're 10 million miles from the center of the sun and travel in a circle, then the length of your orbit is about 62,831,853 miles. If you're 93 million miles from the center of the sun, and travel in a circle, and start out in exactly the right place at just exactly the right time, then you'll always be pretty close to the Earth, and the length of your orbit will be about 584,336,234 miles.
A lightyear is the distance that light can travel in one year.
on average they can travel 1000 miles....in one day
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.
At an average 60 mph, one can travel 1440 miles in a 24-hour day. We don't recommend it.
Earth travels about 1.6 million miles around the sun in one day.
It does not really matter. Just what rate of speed you are traveling at
8 miles
how far does blood travel in a day? it travels 60,000 miles (96,000 km)
Around 700 miles. It depends on weather, their energy and the type of terrain your on.
No one knows for sure exactly how far a butterfly travels in one day when it migrates for the winter. It is believed many species travel 100's of miles a day.
1,296,000 miles
yes exactly
Relative to the center of the earth or the north pole, roughly 424,000 miles for every day it's in orbit.