Question:

How do you measure Light year?

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How do you measure light year? I know light year (ly) is an unit of time taken by light to travel in one year. I am looking for details like concept or experiment used to measure the light year. Being at a point on earth, how do you say this light has travelled one light year and the light has travelled 3 or so light years?

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  1. >I know light year (ly) is an unit of time taken by light to travel in one year.

    Wrong. A light year is a unit of distance, representing the distance light travels in one terrestrial year. IT is equal to a little under ten trillion kilometers, which is to say about 70000 times the distance from the Earth to the Sun.

    >Being at a point on earth, how do you say this light has travelled one light year and the light has travelled 3 or so light years?

    Usually by knowing the distance to the source of the light. This can be achieved in several ways. Triangulation (measuring the angle of a distance object at one point in the Earth's orbit and then measuring it again at another point and then using trigonometry) is one way by which the distance of stars can be determined, although it becomes less useful at very large distances. Faraway galaxies can also have their distance roughly measured by the redshift of their light as seen from the Earth, and this measurement actually gets MORE accurate (at least in terms of percentage inaccuracy) with distance, at least until the edge of the observable universe is reached whereupon it is no longer possible to see things at all.


  2. You don't really measure "a light year", any more than you measure a mile. You measure a distance and then say what the distance is using miles or light years.

    People have measured (and theoretically calculated) how fast light moves. It is about 186,000 miles a second. The measurements is done over a short distance of a few miles or less, by measuring the fraction of a second the light takes to go that far. This is usually done by sending a short flash of light to a distant mirror and timing how long it takes the flash to be reflected back.

    Then if you calculate the distance to some star to be 58 trillion miles, you just say 10 light years instead, because 58 trillion is just too big a number because miles are just too short for measuring such distances. Using miles to measure the distance to another star is like using inches to measure the distance from New York to Paris.

  3. A light-year or light year (symbol: ly) is a unit of length, equal to just under ten trillion kilometres. As defined by the International Astronomical Union (which is the body which has the jurisdictional authority to promulgate the definition), a light-year is the distance that light travels in a vacuum in one Julian year.

  4. One minor correction: a light year is not a unit of time but a unit of distance.  It is the DISTANCE traveled by light in one year.  Since we know the speed at which light travels, and the length of a year, finding the distance of a light year is a very simple calculation:

    speed = distance / time

    distance = speed x time

    distance = (3.00e5 km/s)(31,536,000 s) = 9.46e12 km.

    So, a light year is about 9.46 trillion kilometers, or roughly 63,200 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun.

    We wouldn't use the light year to measure distances on Earth, or even within the solar system (although we may speak of light-minutes or light-hours).  Light years are only used to express the distances between stars.  The nearest star to our Sun is just over 4 light years away, for example.

    I hope that helps.  Good luck!

  5. This is more of a mathematical expression to help better understand the huge numbers that are created when measuring distances to far away objects; it simplifies the expression.

    It is easier to comprehend 4.3 light-years then it would be to comprehend 25,278,089,104,690 miles, knowing that a light year is a long distance anyway.


  6. Light travels at 186,000 miles per second.  So, there are 31,536,000 seconds in a year (60 s x 60 m x 24 h x 365 d = 31,536,000).  That means that light travels 5,865,696,000,000 miles in a year.

  7. A light year is defined specifically by the International Astronomical Union based on the speed of light in a vacuum.

    In terms of what scientists mean when they say "a star is X light years away", they are generally getting that number by calculating the redshift of the body in question.  Redshift refers to the lengthening of electromagnetic waves as they travel through the universe.  Since the universe is expanding at a known rate, scientists can work backwards and see how much the light from a distant star has shifted toward red in order to determine how long that light wavelength was traveling through expanding space.  The more shifted the light is, the farther away the object is.

    An exact calculation can yield a relatively precise result for the distance of the object, which can then be converted into the familiar unit of "light years from earth".

  8. with a light ruler

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