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Just How Big is this Place - NASA A light year is equal to 9,500,000,000,000 km and is the distance that light travels in one year. A light year can be expressed as 9.5 trillion km or in scientific notation as 9.5 x 10 12 km.
StarChild: Galaxies - NASA Galaxies A light-year is the distance light travels in one year. It is 9.5 trillion (9,500,000,000,000) kilometers. The size of a galaxy may be as little as a thousand light-years across or as much as a million light-years across.
StarChild: The Milky Way - NASA Contained in the Milky Way are stars, clouds of dust and gas called nebulae, planets, and asteroids. Stars, dust, and gas fan out from the center of the Galaxy in long spiraling arms. The Milky Way is approximately 100,000 light-years in diameter. Our solar system is 26,000 light-years from the center of the Galaxy.
Redshift and Hubble's Law - NASA Redshift and Hubble's Law For very far objects (beyond about 1 billion light-years) none of the above methods work. Scientists must move from direct observation to using observations in conjunction with a theory. The theory used to determine these very great distances in the universe is based on the discovery by Edwin Hubble that the universe is expanding.
How long does it take to fly to Saturn? - NASA How long it takes to travel anywhere depends on how far you want to go and how fast you move. For example, if you want to travel to the store located 10 km from your house, and you drive at 50 km/hr, it would take you 10/50 hours to get there (in other words, 1/5 of an hour or 12 minutes).
Did Galileo invent the telescope? - NASA The telescope went on, regardless of who invented it, to be one of the most important scientific instruments of the 1600s. For example, it allowed for observations of phenomena in the universe which eventually led to the acceptance of the Sun-centered solar system. Galileo was the first one who used the telescope for astronomy, making wonderful discoveries about our Moon, the …
What is a light-year and how is it used?? - NASA A light-year is a unit of distance. It is the distance that light can travel in one year. Light moves at a velocity of about 300,000 kilometers (km) each second. So in one year, it can travel about 10 trillion km. More p recisely, one light-year is equal to 9,500,000,000,000 kilometers.
Parallax - NASA From the image above, you can see that by knowing the size of Earth's orbit and measuring the angles of the light from the star at two points in the orbit, the distance to the star can be derived. The farther the star is, the smaller the angles. For stars more than about 100 light-years from Earth, we cannot measure any shift and the method fails.
StarChild: The Milky Way - NASA The Milky Way is over 100,000 light-years wide. It is called a spiral galaxy because it has long arms which spin around like a giant pinwheel. Our Sun is a star in one of the arms. When you look up at the night sky, most of the stars you see are in one of the Milky Way arms. Before we had telescopes, people could not see many of the stars very clearly. They blurred together in a …
Supernovae - NASA Supernovae At large distances (up to about 1 billion light-years), astronomers can no longer use methods such as parallax or Cepheid variables. At such large distances, the parallax shift becomes too small and we can no longer even see individual stars in galaxies.