The information about a light-year is not relevant to answer this particular question. To find out how far light goes (in a vacuum) in any specific time, simply multiply 300,000 (km/second) by the number of seconds.
That depends on the speed. For example, the results will be quite different if you walk (maybe 10 minutes), drive a car (maybe 1 minute), or fly in a plane (maybe 10 seconds). The standard formula for speed: distance = speed x time
At the temperature of 20 degrees Celsius the sound travels 343 meters in one second or 1125.328 feet in one second. That is 20580 meters in one minute or 67523 feet in one minute.
50 miles per hour is 50 * 5280 (feet per mile) per hour = 264000 feet per hour and then, depending on how long a time period you're interested in...you could just divide the 264000 feet per hour by 60 to find the distance in feet per minute...then divide that again by 60 to find the distance in feet per second. A car will travel 264000 feet per hour at 50 mph. 264000 feet per hour / 60 minutes per hour = 4400 feet per minute 264000 feet per hour / 3600 seconds per hour = 73.33 feet per second
1 light second = 186,282 miles1 light minute = 60 light seconds = 11,176,920 miles1 mile = 8.947 x 10-8 = 0.00000008947 light minute (rounded)
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.
Light travels at about 186,000 miles per second and so 186,000*60 = 11,160,000 miles in a minute
distance = rate * time rate = distance / time 1 kilometer = 1000 meters 4 hours and 48 minutes = 288 minutes * 60 seconds/minute = 17280 seconds 203 km * 1000 meters/km / 17280 seconds ~= 11.75 meters per second
The distance light will travel, in a vacuum, in one minute.
524 km
A minute is a measurement of time. A light minute is a measurement of distance. it's the distance light would travel in one minute. (That's about 10 million miles!)
That depends on the speed. For example, the results will be quite different if you walk (maybe 10 minutes), drive a car (maybe 1 minute), or fly in a plane (maybe 10 seconds). The standard formula for speed: distance = speed x time
Distance is 66 km for about 40 minute travel.
distance = rate * time 1000 meters = 331 meters/second * x seconds x = 1000 / 331 So about 3 seconds.
It depends on how long (time) you are travelling at 20 kilometres per second. Distance = speed x time Say you travelled for 10 seconds then your distance travelled will be 200 km. Every one minute (60 seconds) you will travel 1200 km.
Light second
Velocity = distance / timeRearranging to solve for time:time = distance / velocitytime = 2.4x1012 km / 1.3x103 km/sectime = 1.85x109 seconds (or about 58 years!)
If it covers 92 meters in one second one needs to work out how many 92 meters there are in 1 Kilometer and this will be the number of seconds required to travel 1 Kilometer. There are 1000 meters in a kilometer thus 1000/92 = 10.87 so it will take the train 10.87 seconds to travel 1 kilometer.