60-Second Science

Completing the Cosmic Course

Too bad you can't get frequent-flier miles for the hundreds of millions of miles you journeyed last year. Steve Mirsky reports. (Originally published January 1, 2008)














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[The following is an exact transcript of this podcast.]

Happy New Year! And don’t feel bad about taking today off. After all, you’ve traveled far. And I’m not talking about the trip home from the party last night. According to NASA, just by being on the planet Earth in the last year, you’ve zipped about 584 million miles around the sun to get back where you were. At an average speed of about 67,000 miles per hour. Again, not talking about the drive home last night.

Of course, the trip was not a perfect circle. As Kepler showed, the Earth’s orbit is an ellipse, with the sun at one of the two focal points. He also figured out the planet goes faster when it’s at perihelion, nearer the sun, than when it’s at aphelion, its farthest distance—which would explain why summer seems to zip by, except the seasons are a function of the tilt of the Earth’s axis, not its different distances from the sun. And the Earth rotated 365 and a quarter times during its sweep around the sun. The trip took 8,766 hours. Or 31,557,600 seconds. Or 525,960 minutes just like this one.

—Steve Mirsky 

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3 Comments

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  1. 1. farzad 05:06 AM 1/1/09

    thanks

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  2. 2. jbrother37 11:36 AM 1/1/09

    But what about our trip around the center of the galaxy?

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  3. 3. jj1234 02:37 PM 1/1/09

    why this comment is the same with last year?
    http://www.sciam.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=31B8218B-B487-BB50-58267B36181A418C

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
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