The term "light year" derives from the distance light travels in a year at approximately 3.0 x 108m/s or 186,000 miles/s. That distance is equal to about 9.46 x 1012 km or 5.9 x 1012 miles.
Light travels about 9.46 trillion kilometers in a lightyear.
No. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, and nothing can travel faster than light. Therefore, the quickest that anything could travel a light year is 1 year. A comet travels much slower than light.
It is not possible for any object with any mass to travel at the speed of light. It is possible to travel at 99.9999999999999999999999999999999999999% the speed of light, you could even travel at "99.9 followed by a trillion trillion 9s"% of the speed of light but never quite 100%.According to our current mathematical theories, for an object with any mass to travel at the speed of light it would take infinite energy to attain that speed.
Traveling 20 million light years at the speed of light would take 20 million years. Since we do not currently have technology that can travel at the speed of light, it would take much longer using current spacecraft technology.
Light takes about 8 minutes and 20 seconds to travel from the Sun to Earth. Since the distance across Earth's orbit is roughly double the distance from the Sun to Earth, it would take light around 17 minutes to travel across the diameter of Earth's orbit.
Miles is a measure of distance, not time. The relation between distance and time is the measurement of how much time it takes an object to travel a specific distance at a specific rate of travel (speed).
In the vacuum of space, a flashlight beam can theoretically travel indefinitely without obstruction, as there is no atmosphere to scatter the light. However, the visibility of that light diminishes with distance due to the inverse square law, which states that light intensity decreases proportionally to the square of the distance from the source. In practical terms, a flashlight could be seen from several miles away, but under ideal conditions and with sensitive equipment, it could potentially be detected from much greater distances, depending on factors like the brightness of the flashlight and the observer's sensitivity to light.
It will contiunue to travel until it encounters something that absorbs it, even if that doesn't happen for a billion years. There is no limit to the distance.
Because the constant amount of light that the flashlight produces is spread outover a larger area when it's farther away, so the intensity at every point is less. The flashlight might attack you, so be careful. Also, if your earlobes are out of control, tape them down. Please.The torch light penetrate each so much light is not parallel, with the light propagation distance become far, spacing between the light light is more and more big, making smaller according to the density of light in the distance.
A light year is a unit of distance; it is the distance lght travel in one year which is 5.8 trillion miles.
Because the constant amount of light that the flashlight produces is spread outover a larger area when it's farther away, so the intensity at every point is less. The flashlight might attack you, so be careful. Also, if your earlobes are out of control, tape them down. Please.The torch light penetrate each so much light is not parallel, with the light propagation distance become far, spacing between the light light is more and more big, making smaller according to the density of light in the distance.
well it depends on what you are measuring your 'much' in. First thing is, a light year is a distance not a time. It is defined as the distance light would travel in the time of one human year. Now to define this: light travels at ~300000000ms-1 and there are 31536000s in one year, so light will travel: 300000000*31536000 = 9.5x1015 metres in one year (that is 95 followed by 14 zeros! so a long distance) so in 9.7 light years light will travel 9.2x1016 metres. Which is a very very long distance.
No. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, and nothing can travel faster than light. Therefore, the quickest that anything could travel a light year is 1 year. A comet travels much slower than light.
yes light does take time to travel, and the time taken is at the speed of light. And so depending on the distance, we will know how much time it has taken.
One year ! A light year - is a measurement of distance over time. It is the distance light takes to travel over a single Earth year. The distance is 5,878,612,843,200 miles.
A light year is the distance that light can travel in a year.
Light travels at about 186,000 miles per second and so 186,000*60 = 11,160,000 miles in a minute
Designed to be portable, many varieties of flashlight exist.