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19 October, 16:11

How many nanoseconds does it take light to travel a distance of 3.80 km in vacuum? Express your answer numerically in nanoseconds.

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Answers (2)
  1. 19 October, 17:53
    0
    t=12600ns

    Explanation:

    We use the relation between distance and velocity to solve this problem:

    d=v*t

    d=3.8km=3.8*10^3m

    v=3*10^8 m/s^2 light's speed

    we solve to find t:

    t=d/v = (3.8*10^3) / (3*10^8) = 1.26*10^ (-5) s=12600*10^ (-9) s=12600ns
  2. 19 October, 20:00
    0
    1.27 * 10⁴ ns

    Explanation:

    Given data

    Distance (d) : 3.80 km = 3.80 * 10³ m Speed of light (v) : 3.00 * 10⁸ m/s

    We can find the time (t) that it takes to the light to travel 3.80 km using the following expression.

    v = d/t

    t = d/v

    t = (3.80 * 10³ m) / (3.00 * 10⁸ m/s)

    t = 1.27 * 10⁻⁵ s

    We know that 1 s = 10⁹ ns. Then,

    1.27 * 10⁻⁵ s * (10⁹ ns/1s) = 1.27 * 10⁴ ns
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