How far does light go in a nanometer?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around converting units related to speed, specifically how long it would take to travel a certain distance at a given speed, and how far light travels in a nanosecond. The subject area includes concepts of speed, distance, and time, along with unit conversions.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the relationship between time, speed, and distance, with one participant attempting to clarify the conversion process for speed and distance. Another participant suggests calculating how far light travels in a nanosecond, providing an estimate and discussing unit cancellation in conversions.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active with participants raising questions and providing insights into unit conversions. There is an ongoing exchange of ideas, with no explicit consensus reached on the calculations, but some guidance on unit cancellation has been offered.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty about conversions and the relationships between different units, indicating a need for clarity in the conversion process. The original poster mentions struggling with conversions, which may influence the discussion dynamics.

bigman8424
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how long, in months to 3 sig. figs, would it take someone traveling 27500 mi/hr to go 1.43*10^12 meters

please help, I'm horrible at conversions
 
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What's the connection between time,speed and distance...?

Daniel.
 
Tell you what big dude, figure that one then figure how far light travels in one nanosecond. I'm guessing about 10 feet. You finish yours, then try and work on mine. I'll let a day go by and then post how I figured it out if you still haven't done so.
 
saltydog said:
Tell you what big dude, figure that one then figure how far light travels in one nanosecond. I'm guessing about 10 feet. You finish yours, then try and work on mine. I'll let a day go by and then post how I figured it out if you still haven't done so.

Oh yea, I didnt' forget: How far does light go in a nanometer:

The important thing to remember about conversions is to arrange the quotients so that the units cancel. That's the purpose of this exercise:

So we have:

[tex]\text{Speed of light: }\frac{186000\quad\text{miles}}{1\quad\text{second}}[/tex]

[tex]\text{feet in a mile:}\frac{5280\quad\text{feet}}{1\quad\text{mile}}[/tex]

[tex]\text{nanoseconds in a second:}\frac{10^9\quad\text{nanoseconds}}{1\quad\text{second}}[/tex]


So:

[tex]\frac{186000\quad\text{miles}}{1\quad\text{second}}*\frac{5280\quad\text{feet}}{1\quad\text{mile}}*\frac{1\quad\text{second}}{10^9\quad\text{nanoseconds}}[/tex]

Note how the units cancel leaving feet/nanosecond. It's about 1 foot. It's the same way with all the other conversion problems: Arrange the quotients so that the units cancel leaving you with what you want.
 

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