Science, asked by gokulrajagopika, 2 months ago

the speed of light in vacccum?​

Answers

Answered by birajdarchhaya182
1

Answer:

The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted c, is a universal physical constant important in many areas of physics. Its exact value is defined as 299792458 metres per second. Wikipedia

Distance: Time

miles per second: 186000

miles per hour: 671000000

metres per second: 299792458

from Moon to Earth: 1.3 s

kilometres per hour: 1080000000

from Sun to Earth (1 AU): 8.3 min mark as branlist

Answered by sanjalibehera09
1

Answer:

299,792,458 metres per second

Distance: Time

Miles per second: 186000sec

Miles per hour: 671000000h

Metres per second: 299792458sec

From Moon to Earth: 1.3 sec

Kilometres per hour: 1080000000h

From Sun to Earth (1 AU): 8.3 min

Explanation:

The speed of light in a vacuum is equal to 299,792,458 metres per second. The speed of light is considered a fundamental constant of nature. Its significance is far broader than its role in describing the property of electromagnetic waves. It serves as the single limiting velocity in the universe, being an upper bound to the propagation speed of signals and to the speeds of all material particles. In the famous relativity equation, E = mc2, the speed of light (c) serves as a constant of proportionality, linking the formerly disparate concepts of mass (m) and energy (E).

Bonus fact is E = mc² is invented by Albert Einstein.

Albert Einstein wins the Nobel prize because of his Theory Of Relativity.

Similar questions