Your question is not as hypothetical as you may think. Sunlight DOES travel at the
speed of 300,000 km per second. At that speed, once the light leaves the surface
of the sun, it takes about 4hours20minutes for it to reach Neptune.
300000km/sec.
300000km per second
That is the approximate speed of electromagnetic radiation (usually referred to as light) in a vacuum.
3.0 M.
Neptune has no atmosphere which means no wind.
you can find the distance when you know your speed and the time you traveled
Neptune
No. The average speed would be the distance traveled divided by the elapsed time.
Neptune's winds are the fastest in the solar system they go at a speed of 2000km/h. They are the fastest in our solar system and maybe even in the entire galaxy.
The planet with the fastest wind speed is Neptune, with a speed of 2000 km/h (1,242.742 miles/h).
No. The total distance traveled divided by constant speed is the time interval.
distance traveled = speed multiplied by time taken.