Sergei Krikalev
Officially 100 km. At one time the US limit was 50 miles, and the European limit was 62.1 miles (100 km). NASA seem to have come around to the 100 km mark, or 328,000 feet.
Mackenzie 2635 miles (4241 km)Yukon River 1978 miles (3183 km)Nelson 1597 miles (2570 km)Columbia River 1398 miles (2250 km)Churchill 994 miles (1600 km)Fraser 850 miles (1368 km)Ottawa 790 miles (1271 km)Athabasca 765 miles (1231 km)North Saskatchewan 758 miles (1220 km)Saint Lawrence River 744 miles (1197 km)
The Hubble space telescope is in near Earth orbit at a orbital height of 559 km (347 miles)
It is 962 km (598 mi) North to South at it's tallest point and 950 km (590 mi) East to West at it's widest point.
The straight-line distance from John o' Groats to Land's End is 603 miles (970 km). By road it is 874 miles (1406 km).
Answer: 100 km = 62.1371 mi.
You would have traveled 80.4672 km.
Approximately 44.7 miles.
The MIR station was in low earth orbit ( about 300 km or 200 miles) and traveled at 17,200 mph (27,700 km/hr), about the same as the space shuttle.
It orbits at 569 km above Earth.
Answer: 100 km = 62.1371 mi.
200 km = 124.3 mi
Answer: 500 mi. = 804.672 km
If you traveled 42 miles that would be the equivalent of traveling 26.097582 KM
The International Space Station's altitude varies from 199 miles to 215 miles or 319.6 km to 346.9 km above the Earth's surface.
380 km equates to 236.12 miles.
5000 km in 12 hours equates to 258.905 miles per hour or 416.67 km/h