Wikimedia Commons, Paul Stansifer, User:84
A light-second is the distance light travels in one second, or 7.5 times the distance around Earth’s equator. A light-year is the distance light travels in one year. How far is that? Multiply the number of seconds in one year by the number of kilometers (or miles) that light travels in one second, and there you have it: one light-year. It’s about 9.5 trillion kilometers (5.88 trillion miles).
Few of us can comprehend such a humongous number. Is there any way for us mere mortals to really understand how far a light-year is?
As a matter of fact, there is. The 20th century astronomer Robert Burnham Jr. – author of Burnham’s Celestial Handbook – devised an ingenious way to portray the distance of one light-year. He did this by relating the light-year to the astronomical unit – the Earth-sun distance.
One astronomical unit equals about 150 million kilometers (93 million miles). Another way of looking at it: the astronomical unit is a bit more than 8 light-minutes in distance.
Quite by coincidence, the number of astronomical units in one light-year and the number of inches in one mile are virtually the same. For general reference, there are 63,000 astronomical units in one light-year, and 63,000 inches in one mile. This wonderful coincidence enables us to bring the light-year down to Earth. If we scale the astronomical unit – the Earth-sun distance – at one inch, then the light-year on this scale represents one mile.
The closest star to Earth, other than the sun, is Alpha Centauri at some 4.4 light-years away. Scaling the Earth-sun distance at one inch places this star at 4.4 miles (7 kilometers) distant.
Scaling the astronomical unit at one inch, here are distances to various stars, star clusters and galaxies:
Alpha Centauri: 4 miles
Sirius: 9 miles
Vega: 25 miles
Fomalhaut: 25 miles
Arcturus: 37 miles
Antares: 600 miles
Pleiades open star cluster: 440 miles
Hercules globular star cluster (M13): 24,000 miles
Center of Milky Way galaxy: 27,000 miles
Great Andromeda galaxy (M31): 2,300,000 miles
Sombrero galaxy (M104): 65,000,000 miles
By my calculations there are 9.02 trillion (9 x 10^12) miles in a light year.
2.86×10^5(mi/s)x 3.6×10^3(s/hr)x24(hr/da)x 365(da/yr)= 9.02×10^12
= 9.02 trillion miles per lightyear – not 5.88 trillion!
Correction on my calculation of the miles in a lightyeat.
Light travels at 186,000 miles a second and not at
286,000 miles a second which I used in my previous calculation.
Thus the value of 5.866 trillion miles in a lightyear is correct!
My bad!
i really dont understand this question and i was wondering if you could help . . . .ok here goes . . . . .this is the distance of about 9.5 trillion kilometersthat light travels in one year( two words) and its supposed to start with an “n” . . . . .can you help me?
It’s about 5 trillion years.