Number of Miles In One Light Year

  • #1
felizgu
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TL;DR Summary: This is an astronomy application.

One light-year is defined by astronomers to be the distance that a beam of light will travel in 1 year (365 days). If the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, how many miles are in a light-year? Express your answer in scientific notation.

Let me see.

24 hours in one day.

3600 seconds in one hour.

24 x 3600 = 86,400 seconds in one day.

365 x 86,400 = 31,536,000

31,536,000 x 186,000 = 5,865,696,000,000

1. Is this right?

2. If it is right, how do I express my answer in scientific notation?
 
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  • #2
Please be aware that the 365 days in a year is an approximate number (good to ~3 sig fig so the appropriate scientific notation answer would be $$1~LIGHT~YEAR~=5.87x10^{12} mi$$. There is probably an official value certified by the ministry of unfathomable distances........
 
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  • #3
hutchphd said:
Please be aware that the 365 days in a year is an approximate number (good to ~3 sig fig so the appropriate scientific notation answer would be $$1~LIGHT~YEAR~=5.87x10^{12} mi$$. There is probably an official value certified by the ministry of unfathomable distances........
Do I multiply 93 x 10^(6) by 5.87 x 10^(12) to get my answer?
 
  • #4
felizgu said:
Do I multiply 93 x 10^(6) by 5.87 x 10^(12) to get my answer?
Where does the 93 x 10^6 come from in your thinking?

Take a step back and do a sanity check: what result are you being asked for? What results did you get? Did you answer what the question is asking?
 
  • #5
DaveC426913 said:
Where does the 93 x 10^6 come from in your thinking?

Take a step back and do a sanity check: what result are you being asked for? What results did you get? Did you answer what the question is

Given information:

- The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second.
- One light-year is the distance that light travels in one year (365 days).

I have to calculate the distance that light travels in one year.

Distance = Speed × Time

Distance = 186,000 miles per second × (365 days × 24 hours per day × 60 minutes per hour × 60 seconds per minute)

Distance = 5.88 × 10^12 miles

is this right?

If it is right, I say the number of miles in a light-year is 5.88 × 10^12 miles.

You say?
 
  • #6
felizgu said:
If it is right, I say the number of miles in a light-year is 5.88 × 10^12 miles.
That is correct.

Note however that a year is considered to be 365.25 days, not 365 (hence a leap year every four years). This does not change the numerical value of the length of the light year with 3 significant digits, as you wrote it.
 
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  • #7
felizgu said:
Distance = 186,000 miles per second × (365 days × 24 hours per day × 60 minutes per hour × 60 seconds per minute)
One tip that I learned in undergrad that has always helped me keep things straight in unit conversions is to use the trick of "multiply by 1" for each unit change. Multiplying a quantity by 1 does not change it, but it can be used to convert units if you make the 1 equal to a fraction involving the sets of units.

So I would write your equation above as:
$$Distance (miles) = \frac{186,000 miles}{second} \times {365 days} \times \frac{24 hours}{day} \times \frac{60 minutes}{hour} \times \frac{60 seconds}{minute}$$

You can see that the units on the RHS of the equation cancel out to give you the units of miles that you want on the LHS. :smile:
 
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  • #8
berkeman said:
One tip that I learned in undergrad that has always helped me keep things straight in unit conversions is to use the trick of "multiply by 1" for each unit change. Multiplying a quantity by 1 does not change it, but it can be used to convert units if you make the 1 equal to a fraction involving the sets of units.

So I would write your equation above as:
$$Distance (miles) = \frac{186,000 miles}{second} \times {365 days} \times \frac{24 hours}{day} \times \frac{60 minutes}{hour} \times \frac{60 seconds}{minute}$$

You can see that the units on the RHS of the equation cancel out to give you the units of miles that you want on the LHS. :smile:
1. Thank you for your reply.

2. I am not a college student. I graduated college in June 1994.

3. I am a middle-aged man conducting a self-study of mathematics.
 
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  • #9
hutchphd said:
Please be aware that the 365 days in a year is an approximate number ... There is probably an official value certified by the ministry of unfathomable distances........
Close: it is actually the International Astronomical Union, and the official value is 365.25 days each of exactly 86,400 seconds.

https://www.iau.org/public/themes/measuring/
 
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  • #10
pbuk said:
Close: it is actually the International Astronomical Union, and the official value is 365.25 days each of exactly 86,400 seconds.

https://www.iau.org/public/themes/measuring/
Thanks for the link. However, I posted the numbers as given in the word problem.
 
  • #11
Thread is closed for moderation due to some issues with the OP not related to this thread.
 
  • #12
Thread closed due to OP being banned for creating multiple accounts.
 

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