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1 December, 04:08

How many nanoseconds does it take light to travel 2.50 feet in a vacuum

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  1. 1 December, 04:18
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    A handy-dandy "rule of thumb" that I and many other engineers

    have been using for years is:

    1 nanosecond = = = > 1 foot.

    Let's figure it out and see whether that's even close:

    Speed of light in vacuum = 299,792,458 meters per second.

    (299,792,458 m/s) x (1 sec / 10⁹ nanosec) x (3.28084 ft/meter)

    = (299,792,458 x 1 x 3.28084 x 10⁻⁹) ft/nanosec

    = 0.983571 ft/nanosec.

    That's 1.64% less than 1.000000.

    The engineer's handy-dandy rule of thumb is valid.

    2.5 feet would take

    (2.5 x 0.983571 sec) = 2.45893 nanoseconds
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