That doesn't make much sense at first sight
because "light year" contains the word "year", which is normally a unit
of time. But, light years measure distance..... the distance light can
travel in a year!
You are used to
measuring distances in either inches/feet/miles or centimeters/meters/kilometers,
depending on where you live. You know
how long a foot or a meter is - you are comfortable with these
units because you
use them every day. Same thing with miles and kilometers.
These are nice, human increments of distance.
When astronomers use their telescopes to look at stars, things are different.
The distances are gigantic. For example, the closest star to
earth (besides our sun) is something like 24,000,000,000,000 miles (24 million, million
closest
star.
If you were to travel
in a spaceship at a million miles per hour, it would take you 24 million
hours to travel to that nearest star..... or a million days.... so it
would take more than 2700 years for the journey! Wow, just think of
that.
There are stars
that are billions of times further away than that. When you start talking
about distances that are that far away, a mile or kilometer just isn't
a practical unit to use because the numbers get too big. No one wants
to write or talk about numbers that have 20 digits in them!
So for really
long distances, people use a unit called a light year to measure distance.
Light travels
at 186,000 miles per second (300,000 kilometers per second). Therefore
a light second is 186,000 miles (300,000 kilometers). A light year
is the distance light could travel in a year..
So as it can travel
186,000 miles in one second
in one minute
it would travel 186,000 miles x 60 miles
and in one hour
it would travel 186,000 miles x 60 x 60 miles
As there are 24
hours in a day it would travel
186,000 miles
x 60 x 60 x 24 miles each day
and in a year
(as there are 365 days in normal years but 366 days in a leap year
- averaging 365.25 days in an average year) light travels
186,000 x 60 x
60 x 24 x 365.25 miles
= 5.9 million,
million miles
in metres that
would be 300,000,000 x 60 x 60 x 24 x 365.25 m
= 9.5 thousand,
million, million metres
or 9.5 million,
million kilometres
A light year is 9,500,000,000,000 km or 5,900,000,000,000 miles
That is a very long way!
Using a light year
as a distance measurement has another advantage
- it helps you determine age of stars.
Let's say that a star is 1 million
light years away. The light from that star has travelled at the
speed of light to
reach us. Therefore it has taken the star's light 1 million
years to get here, and the light we are seeing was created 1
million years ago.
So the star we are seeing is really how the star looked
a million years ago, not how it looks today. In the same way,
our sun is 8 or so
light minutes away. If the sun were to suddenly explode
right now, we wouldn't know about it for 8 minutes because that
is how long it would take for the light of the explosion to get here!
Physics Fact: A light nanosecond - the distance light can travel in
a billionth of a second - is about a foot (about 30 cm). Radar uses
this fact
to measure how far away something like an airplane is. A radar antenna sends out
a short radio pulse and then waits for it to echo off an
airplane or other target. While it's waiting it counts the number of
nanoseconds that pass. Radio waves travel at the speed of light, so
the number of nanoseconds
divided by 2 tells the radar unit how far away
the object is!