Light travels at about 186,282 miles per second. In nine years, light would travel approximately 5.9 trillion miles.
One light year is about 6 trillion miles. So if we calculate the amount of light years, we can calculate the amount of years. In order to figure out the number of light years, we divide 11 by 6, adding trillion to our answer (6 because 1 light year is 6 trillion miles). 11 divided by 6 is about 1.83 (or 1.83 trillion). So, in conclusion, it would take light 1.83 years to travel 11 trillion miles. Another way to solve this is simply calculating the amount of time it would take light to travel 1 trillion miles and multiply that by 11. So you divide 365 (the amount of days in a year) by 6 you get 60. It would take light 60 days for light to travel 1 trillion miles. 60 times 11 is 660, so it would take 660 days (or 1.8 years) for light to travel 11 trillion miles.
A lightyear is a unit of distance and is equivalent to about 9.46 trillion kilometers (5.88 trillion miles). It is the distance that light travels in a vacuum in one year.
Light travels at about 186,000 miles per second and so divide this into 1,000,000,000,000 which is about 5,376,344 seconds
A lightyear is a unit of distance, not time. It represents the distance that light can travel in one year, which is about 5.88 trillion miles.
It would take about 10 million years for light to travel a trillion miles to reach the human eye, assuming a constant speed of light in a vacuum.
It depends on your speed. Even at the speed of light this trip would take at least 9.4 months.
The time it would take to travel 120 trillion miles depends on the speed of travel. For example, if you were traveling at the speed of light (186,282 miles per second), it would take approximately 214,748 years to cover that distance. However, with current technology, spacecraft travel at much slower speeds, so it would take significantly longer. In reality, the distance of 120 trillion miles is so vast that it is currently beyond our technological capabilities to travel such a distance within a reasonable timeframe.
A 'light-year' is a distance calculated by how far light can travel in one standard year. A 'light-minute' is how far light can travel in one minute. Earth is about 8 light-minutes (93,000,000 miles) from the Sun. 14 light-years in space is going to be about 84 trillion miles, a huuuuge distance!
Time = Distance/Speed = 1.18 trillion seconds = 37,400 years, approx.
One light-year is the distance light travels in one year, which is about 5.88 trillion miles. Light doesn't orbit the Earth, but if you're asking how long it takes light to travel around the Earth's circumference once, at the speed of light (about 186,282 miles per second), it would take only about 0.13 seconds.
about 300,000 years since 120 trillion miles=approximately 20 light years