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Escape Velocities required

on the Sun, to escape the Sun's gravity: 617.5 km/s

on Mercury, to escape Mercury's gravity: 4.4 km/s at Mercury, to escape the Sun's gravity: 67.7 km/s

on Venus, to escape Venus' gravity: 10.4 km/s at Venus, to escape the Sun's gravity: 49.5 km/s

at the Earth, to escape the Earth's gravity: 11.2 km/s at the Earth/Moon, to escape the Sun's gravity: 42.1 km/s

on the Moon, to escape the Moon's gravity: 2.4 km/s at the Moon, to escape the Earth's gravity: 1.4 km/s

on Mars, to escape Mars' gravity: 5.0 km/s at Mars, to escape the Sun's gravity: 34.1 km/s

on Jupiter, to escape Jupiter's gravity: 59.5 km/s at Jupiter, to escape the Sun's gravity: 18.5 km/s

on Saturn, to escape Saturn's gravity: 35.5 km/s at Saturn, to escape the Sun's gravity: 13.6 km/s

on Uranus, to escape Uranus' gravity: 21.3 km/s at Uranus, to escape the Sun's gravity: 9.6 km/s

on Neptune, to escape Neptune's gravity: 23.5 km/s at Neptune, to escape the Sun's gravity: 7.7 km/s

on Pluto, to escape Pluto's gravity: 1.3 km/s at Pluto, to escape the Sun's gravity: 6.7 km/s

To convert km/sec to mph, multiply by 3600 x 5/8 = 2,250

Thus 11.2 km/s escape velocity from earth = 25,200 mph

2006-07-03 03:38:33 · answer #1 · answered by Not_many_people_know_this_but 3 · 3 0

does no longer it merely be 17 miles. I advise even without the equation, its 34 miles per hour, for 1/2 an hour, so 34 / 2. Or with the equation D = 34 X 0.5 = 17. So yeah, the merely right answer is 17. yet that looks really trouble-free, so possibly i'm doing it incorrect

2016-10-14 02:07:13 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

escape velocity with respect to earth is around 25000 miles per hour thats 11.2 km/s thats quite fast you know.

2006-07-03 08:36:34 · answer #3 · answered by thejur 3 · 0 0

The gravitational pull of the Earth.

2006-07-03 03:24:20 · answer #4 · answered by John H 2 · 0 0

escape into space as that is the escape velocity to escape from the earth's gravitational field

2006-07-03 03:15:12 · answer #5 · answered by raj 7 · 0 0

Well, that's about the Earth's escape velocity.

2006-07-03 03:42:10 · answer #6 · answered by J C 3 · 0 0

Gravity per chance? - but it depends in which direction youre travelling... Hopefully not down ;) grin

2006-07-03 14:41:31 · answer #7 · answered by want_to_explore_life 3 · 0 0

Your Shadow

2006-07-05 01:06:18 · answer #8 · answered by Ngozika N 1 · 0 0

Something traveling at 24,999 MPH?

2006-07-03 03:14:24 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

beside the earth's gravity, the hilary for president campaign

2006-07-03 03:15:18 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Earth's Gravity well.

2006-07-03 03:15:09 · answer #11 · answered by foxspearman 4 · 0 0

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