Theoretically, since you did not give any specific destinations, the time is based on the distance traveled. So if you needed to travel 1 light year away, and seeing how speed of light is the fastest thing currently known to man a wormhole theoretically travels at the speed of light so 1 earth year.
It is important to understand that time is a measurement of the earth around the sun. So a year to use can be shorter/longer to other stars.
Since the nearest star to our sun is the Alpha Centauri system it'd take 14.27 years traveling in a wormhole, or better put 1558 and a half earth days.
Light travels 5,865,696,000,000 miles/year, we can also get the speed of our fastest rocket which has to be manned would be the Apollo 10 mission witch achieving the speed of 24,790 mph. 14.27 Light years =
8.37034819 × 1013That is the miles traveled by light from our sun to Alpha Centauri. If we took the amount of miles traveled by light and divided by the speed of apollo 10 of the amount of miles it covers in a year, 2,173,041,820 m/year, then take this number and divid by the amount of miles needed to travel; which is 38,519.0387 earth years, which is (at the current life expectancy ~70 years old) 550.27 generations including your self.A wormhole is a theoretical construct that arises out of reasoning that goes along with some of the leading research in cosmology. No evidence of the actual existence of a wormhole has been observed yet.
No ______________________________________________________________________ well, the answer is no for now, a glaxy is a straight line thorugh to the other side but when a worm hole is made it curves the galaxy to a large U allowing passagee through instead of around, however we do not yet have a ship the can stand the quick change in speed nd it would tear us apart into small bits but pieces wuld make it through.
Wormholes have a gravitational pull but don't suck you in like black holes do. I , a 13 year old boy, have created an experiment that can make a wormhole that we can use to time travel. If you want to read the experiment plan follow this link... http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-367891#
There are currently no known or proven wormholes near Earth. Wormholes are theoretical passages through spacetime that could potentially connect two distant points, but there is no empirical evidence of their existence or proximity to Earth.
unknown But since you've already postulated two items so far unobserved and unknown to science ... a wormhole, and a person traveling through one ... the story is completely in your control, and you might as well keep going and make up a description of what happens to him. It would depend on the size of the wormhole. One the diameter of a donut would do the traveler serious harm. One the size of a bus wouldn't. The survivor would merely end up somewhere else.
The concept of wormholes was first theorized by physicist Ludwig Flamm in 1916, but it was theoretical physicist Kip Thorne who made significant contributions to our understanding of wormholes in the 20th century. He worked on the physics of wormholes and helped popularize the concept through his research and writings.
The concept of wormholes is theoretical, and there is no concrete evidence that they exist or how they would function for travel. If wormholes were to exist, the time it would take to travel through one would depend on the specific characteristics of the wormhole, such as its size, stability, and destination point.
Wormholes are highly hypothetical; there is no evidence that they exist, or even that they can exist.
A wormhole is a theoretical construct that arises out of reasoning that goes along with some of the leading research in cosmology. No evidence of the actual existence of a wormhole has been observed yet.
wormholes may possibly exist, but there is no evidence saying that 'wormhole is definitely exist. but if you do get through the wormholes, that means you get a shortcut through spacetime, so you can go into other universes outside our universe and also you can go through time like time traveling.
A wormhole is a tunnel that connects two point's in the space time continuum. I ,a 13 year old boy, have created an experiment that can make a wormhole that we can use to time travel. If you want to read the experiment plan then follow this link.. http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-367891#
No ______________________________________________________________________ well, the answer is no for now, a glaxy is a straight line thorugh to the other side but when a worm hole is made it curves the galaxy to a large U allowing passagee through instead of around, however we do not yet have a ship the can stand the quick change in speed nd it would tear us apart into small bits but pieces wuld make it through.
Wormholes have a gravitational pull but don't suck you in like black holes do. I , a 13 year old boy, have created an experiment that can make a wormhole that we can use to time travel. If you want to read the experiment plan follow this link... http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-367891#
There are currently no known or proven wormholes near Earth. Wormholes are theoretical passages through spacetime that could potentially connect two distant points, but there is no empirical evidence of their existence or proximity to Earth.
I am pretty sure a wormhole is just bending the fabric of space and making a wrinkle and going through the wrinkle to the other side, if light were to follow you into the wormhole, it'd go faster than you, if it were not and depending on the span of the wormhole, you could theoretically beat the light by taking it as a shortcut
unknown But since you've already postulated two items so far unobserved and unknown to science ... a wormhole, and a person traveling through one ... the story is completely in your control, and you might as well keep going and make up a description of what happens to him. It would depend on the size of the wormhole. One the diameter of a donut would do the traveler serious harm. One the size of a bus wouldn't. The survivor would merely end up somewhere else.
The duration of Through the Wormhole is 2640.0 seconds.