A light year is approximately 9.46 x 1012 km, so a cubic light year is 8.47 x 1038 km3, or 8.47 x 1047 m3.
It takes 1015 pico liters to make a cubic meter.
So cubic light year is equal to 8.47 x 1047x 1015 = 8.47 x 1062 picoliters.
Or 847,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,
000,000,000 picoliters = 1 cubic light year.
No. A light year is a measure of distance, not time; it is the distance that light travels in a year. So a cubic light year is a measure of volume, rather like a cubic foot or cubic meeter only much larger.
The cube of any unit of length: cubic meter, cubic centimeter, cubic decimeter, cubic kilometer, cubic light-year, etc.
The unit for volume is the cubic meter. Or some other cubed linear measurement - such as cubic centimeter, cubic millimeter, cubic kilometer, or cubic light-year.
You seem to be asking me to compare surface area to a volume; this doesn't generally make sense.
Strangely enough, this is the same as asking how many minutes in a gram, or how many dollars in a light year. The thing is that a cubic measurement is different from a square measurement (which in turn is different from a length measurement). You can't turn square feet into cubic feet, they won't go.
between 165 cubic metres and 210 cubic metres per year.
A pilot light typically uses about 600-900 cubic feet of gas per year.
A pilot light typically consumes about 600-900 cubic feet of gas per year.
A pilot light typically uses about 600-900 cubic feet of propane per year.
A light-year is about 9,461,000,000,000 km.
A light-year is about 9,461,000,000,000 km.
A pilot light typically consumes about 600-900 cubic feet of natural gas per year.