- Light-second
A light-second is a
unit of length . It is defined as thedistance light travels in an absolutevacuum in onesecond or 299,792,458meter s. Note that this value is considered exact, since the meter is actually (as of1983 ) defined in terms of the light second. [ [http://inms-ienm.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/research/optical_frequency_si_e.html] National Research Council of Canada: "Optical frequency - maintaining the SI metre"] It is just over 186,282mile s and almost 109 feet.A
light-minute is 60 light-seconds and alight-hour is 60 light-minutes, or 3600 light-seconds. Alight-year is 31,557,600 light-seconds.Some distances in light seconds:
* The mean diameter of the
Earth is about 0.0425 light-seconds.
* The mean distance, over land, between opposite sides of the planetEarth is about 0.0668 light-seconds (which also means that communications between opposite sides of the planet, taking a circumferential path, can never travel faster than about 67 milliseconds).
*Communications satellite s are typically 0.001334s (low earth orbit ) to 0.1194s (geostationary orbit )
* The average distance from the Earth to theMoon is about 1.282 light-seconds.
* The diameter of theSun is about 4.643 light-seconds.
* The average distance from the Earth to the Sun (i.e. 1astronomical unit ) is 499.0 light-seconds, or 8.317 light-minutes.It is also possible to add diminutive suffixes, such as the light-
nanosecond , equal to almost exactly 30 cm (11.8 in or nearly a foot).References
ee also
*
Light-day
*Light-hour
*Light-minute
*Light-month
*Light-week
*Light-year
*Speed of light
*1 E8 m
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