Speed | KPH | c factors | Approximate time to travel | ||||||
Earth to moon | Across solar system | Between two nearby star sytems | Across one sector | Across Federation | Across entire galaxy | To nearby galaxy | |||
400,000 km | 12 mio km | 5 LY | 20 LY | 10,000 LY | 100,000 LY | 2 Mio LY | |||
Standard Orbit | 9,600 | slow sublight | 42 hours | 142 years | 558,335 years | 2 Mio years | 1.12 Bio years | 11.17 Bio years | 223.33 Bio years |
Full Impulse | 270 Mio | 0.25 sublight | 5.38 sec | 44 hours | 20 years | 80 years | 40,000 years | 400,000 years | 8 Mio years |
Warp 1 | 1078 Mio | 1 | 1.34 sec | 11 hours | 5 years | 20 years | 10,000 years | 100,000 years | 2 Mio years |
Warp 2 | 11 Bio | 10 | 0.13 sec | 1 hour | 6 months | 3 years | 992 years | 9,921 years | 198,425 years |
Warp 3 | 42 Bio | 39 | 0.03 sec | 17 min | 2 months | 1 year | 257 years | 2,568 years | 51,360 years |
Warp 4 | 109 Bio | 102 | N/M | 7 min | 18 days | 2 months | 98 years | 984 years | 19,686 years |
Warp 5 | 230 Bio | 214 | N/M | 3 min | 9 days | 1 month | 47 years | 468 years | 9,357 years |
Warp 6 | 423 Bio | 392 | N/M | 2 min | 5 days | 19 days | 25 years | 255 years | 5,096 years |
Warp 7 | 707 Bio | 656 | N/M | 1 min | 3 days | 11 days | 15 years | 152 years | 3,048 years |
Warp 8 | 1103 Bio | 1,024 | N/M | 39 sec | 2 days | 7 days | 10 years | 98 years | 1,953 years |
Warp 9 | 1.63 Tr | 1,516 | N/M | 26 sec | 1 day | 5 days | 7 years | 66 years | 1,319 years |
Warp 9.2 | 1.78 Tr | 1,649 | N/M | 24 sec | 27 hours | 4 days | 6 years | 61 years | 1,213 years |
Warp 9.6 | 2.06 Tr | 1,909 | N/M | 21 sec | 23 hours | 4 days | 5 years | 52 years | 1,048 years |
Warp 9.975 | 3.29 Tr | 3,053 | N/M | 13 sec | 14 hours | 2 days | 3 years | 33 years | 655 years |
Warp 9.99 | 8.53 Tr | 7,912 | N/M | 5 sec | 6 hours | 22 hours | 1 years | 13 years | 253 years |
Warp 9.9999 | 215 Tr | 199,516 | N/M | 0.2 sec | 13 min | 53 min | 18 days | 6 months | 10 years |
Note: Full impulse usually refers to an acceleration, not to a fixed speed. The value above therefore can only be used as a reference for quarter lightspeed which would be achieved after some time under impulse acceleration and with only minor relativistic effects (and those you'd find messy).
Second Note: This is technobabble. Do not use this in physics exams.
Third Note: Thanks to Michael Okuda and Rick Sternbach for figuring this out. Jari Makela for replacing miles with kilometers.