(LY) Light Years and (AU) Astronomical Unit.
1 astronomical unit (AU) is approximately 93 million miles.
They are less than 1 AU from the sun.
1 astronomical unit (AU) is approximately 1.496 x 10^11 meters.
1 AU is 93 million miles. 2790 million miles is 30 AU.
1 light year is approximately 63,241 AU. Therefore, 4.7 light years is about 297,116 AU.
An AU. An AU is about 150,000,000 kilometers, while a nanometer is 1 billionth of a meter.
Mercury is about 0.39 AU from the Sun, Venus is about 0.72 AU, Earth is about 1 AU, Mars is about 1.52 AU, Jupiter is about 5.2 AU, Saturn is about 9.58 AU, Uranus is about 19.22 AU, and Neptune is about 30.05 AU from the Sun.
(LY) Light Years and (AU) Astronomical Unit.
A light year is much bigger, an AU is only about 8 light minutes.1 light year = 63,240 AU
There are six syllables. Au-to-mat-i-cal-ly.
There are approximently 63,239.6717 Astronomical Units (AU) in a Light-year (LY).
1 Astronomical Unit (AU) is the average distance between the earth and the sun. It is approximately 149,598,000 km. 1 light year (ly) is the distance light travels in one year. It is approximately 9,460,730,472,580 km The other commonly used astronomical measurement is the parsec. 1 parsec (pc) is the distance at which 1 arcsecond measures 1 AU. It is approximately 3.26156 ly or 30856740079724 km. 1 arcsecond is 1/60 of a arcminute.1 arcsecond is 1/60 of a degree.1 degree is 1/360 of a circle.
Mary Ly is 5' 1".
Exactly in the order in which they're listed in the question.
Kilometre, Astronomical Unit, Light Year, Parsec.
Both measurements used for distance in space are LY (Light Years) and AU (Astronomical Unit) Respectively the measurement LY measures distance in the speed of light and our cycle of 1 year orbit, so something that is 1 LY away works like this - the light takes one earth year to reach that us from that object (usually a Sun/Star) therefore if we were to travel at the speed of light it would take us one year to reach our destination AU is measures distance by using the earth and the sun - and the basis of this is that the earth from the sun is 1 Astronomical Unit. This is mostly used to calculate distance in our own solar system, objects far out of our immediate system are measured mostly using LY