15 15
The asteroids in the asteroid belt do move around the Sun, but they don't rotate as a single unit like a planet does. Each asteroid has its own orbital path and speed, so there isn't a specific speed at which the asteroid belt as a whole rotates.
I assume you mean "asteroid". The speed of an asteroid is comparable to that of a planet. For example, an asteroid with an orbit similar to Earth's orbit would have a speed similar to Earth, which moves around the Sun at a rate of 30 km/second. An asteroid that is much further out will be slower; one that gets closer to the Sun will move faster, at least during part of its orbit.You can calculate the speed of an asteroid from Earth's speed, and the relative distances to the Sun, using Kepler's Third Law.
The mean radius of the asteroid Vesta is about 262.7 kilometers (163.2 miles).
its a fifty fifty chance we just dont know It depends on how fast the asteroid is moving and the size of the asteroid. Then you have to consider the size of the planet (diameter, etc.), and its orbital speed, etc.
The escape velocity of a black hole is equal or greater than the speed of light, so light cannot escape
The asteroids in the asteroid belt do move around the Sun, but they don't rotate as a single unit like a planet does. Each asteroid has its own orbital path and speed, so there isn't a specific speed at which the asteroid belt as a whole rotates.
A asteroid travels at the speed of light.
I assume you mean "asteroid". The speed of an asteroid is comparable to that of a planet. For example, an asteroid with an orbit similar to Earth's orbit would have a speed similar to Earth, which moves around the Sun at a rate of 30 km/second. An asteroid that is much further out will be slower; one that gets closer to the Sun will move faster, at least during part of its orbit.You can calculate the speed of an asteroid from Earth's speed, and the relative distances to the Sun, using Kepler's Third Law.
No instantaneous speed is not final speed.
for fastest speed of actual forward movement i believe its an asteroid
The escape speed depends upon:Mass of the planetSize of the planet
The average orbital speed is 17.882 km/s of asteroid in space
Depends entirely on the impacting speed and the size of the asteroid. Generally an asteroid impact is not going to bode well for life on Earth
The mean radius of the asteroid Vesta is about 262.7 kilometers (163.2 miles).
You can find the final speed using the formula: final speed = initial speed + (acceleration * time). Simply plug in the values for initial speed, acceleration, and time to calculate the final speed of the object.
The effect of a force depends on the mass of the object to which it's being applied. Small force on a low-mass object produces the same identical motion as large force on a large-mass object. So ... in addition to other mathematical and physical problems with the connection between force and escape ... it's impossible to name one force that always has the same effect on any object large or small.But escape velocity is truly a speed at which any object, large or small size, large or small mass, can enter earth orbit. There is another speed at which any object can escape earth and enter solar orbit, and another speed at which any object can escape the sun and leave the solar system. Specifying the speed eliminates the necessity of specifying the characteristics of the object you're talking about.
The asteroid with the greater mass will possess a greater amount of kinetic energy when approaching Earth at the same speed.