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  1. Jan 13, 2023 · Moving at a speed of 50,000-miles per hour, it would take 32-days to reach Venus, the closest planet, and 2,250-days to reach Neptune, the furthest planet.

  2. Calculate how long it would take to reach planets, stars, or galaxies, as well as fuel mass, velocity and more!

  3. Dec 12, 2011 · The time varies over a range of about 16 minutes depending on the relative positions of Earth and the target planet in their orbits; Earth can be 8 light-minutes closer than the Sun is, or 8 light-minutes farther away.

  4. Problem 1 – The entire International Space Station orbits Earth at a speed of 28,000 kilometers per hour (17,000 mph). At this speed, how many days would it take to travel to the sun from Earth, located at a distance of 149 million kilometers? Answer: Time = Distance/speed so Time = 149,000,000 km/ 28,000 = 5321 hours or 222 days.

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  5. The closest that Earth and Venus approach each other is when Venus is at its furthest position from the sun (aphelion) and Earth is at its closest (perihelion), with both planets on the same side of the Sun. This is known as an inferior conjunction and happens roughly once every 584 days.

  6. Oct 31, 2023 · The fastest we have reached Venus from Earth is 109 days and the longest it has ever taken was 198 days. The truth is the exact time varies on a number of factors such as where the two planets are in their respective orbits. On average most journeys to Venus should take 120 – 130 days or roughly 4 months.

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  8. Aug 9, 2024 · Bottom Line. In Short. Mercury: ~7 years (average) Venus: ~161.25 days (about 5.375 months) (average) Mars: ~128 to 360 days (varies per mission) Jupiter: ~3 years and 3 months (average for flybys); ~5.5 years (average for orbital missions) Saturn: ~6.5/7 years (for orbital missions like Cassini)