Transcript
MONICA GRADY:
The thing about astronomy is the distances are so enormous it doesn’t really make much sense to talk in terms of miles or kilometres.
So we use a unit called a light-year, now that might sound a bit odd because of course a year is a measure of time and not distance, but let me explain how we do it.
So a year is equal to 365 days, except every 4 years we have a leap year, so it works out on average to be 365.25 days. Now, a 365.25 days has got 24 hours in it, each hour has got 60 minutes in it, each minute has got 60 seconds in it. So actually, one year is this many seconds.
If we change tack about it now and think about how fast light travels, light travels, very fast. It travels at 300 million metres in one second, so if you put that together with how many seconds there are in a year, what you come to is that light travels in one year, it actually travels about 9.5 million million kilometres or 6 million million miles.
So in one year it travels 9.5 million million kilometres or 6 million million miles. The nearest star to us, Proxima Centauri, is four light-years away. So Proxima Centauri is four times 9.5, so that’s 38, 38 million million kilometres away, or 24 million million miles away.
That’s why we think in terms of light-years, because the numbers are much easier to grasp.