- 1 petametre
-
To help compare different distances this page lists lengths starting at 1015 m (1 Pm or 1,000,000 million km or 6,700 astronomical units (AU) or 0.11 light years).
Distances shorter than 1 Pm
- 1.9 Pm ± .5 Pm = 12,000 AU = 0.2 light year radius of Cat's Eye Nebula's inner core[1]
- 4.7 Pm = 30,000 AU = half light year diameter of Bok globule Barnard 68[2]
- 7.5 Pm — 50,000 AU — Possible outer boundary of Oort cloud (other estimates are 75,000 to 125,000 or even 189,000 AU (1.6, 2, and 3 light years, respectively))
- 7.7 Pm — 52,000 AU — Aphelion distance of the Great Daylight Comet of 1910
- 9.46 Pm — 63,000 AU — One light year, the distance travelled by light in one year
Distances longer than 10 Pm
See also
Orders of magnitude for length in E notation shorter than one metre: <−24 −24 −23 −22 −21 −20 −19 −18 −17 −16 −15 −14 −13 −12 −11 −10 −9 −8 −7 −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 longer than 1 metre: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Notes
- ^ radius = distance times sin(angular diameter/2) = 0.2 light year. Distance = 3.3 ± 0.9 kly; angular diameter = 20 arcseconds(Reed et al. 1999)
- ^ Michael Szpir (May-June 2001). "Bart Bok's Black Blobs". American Scientist. Archived from the original on 2003-06-29. http://web.archive.org/web/20030629033609/http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/14678. Retrieved 2008-11-19. "Bok globules such as Barnard 68 are only about half a light-year across and weigh in at about two solar masses"
References
- Reed, Darren S.; Balick, Bruce; Hajian, Arsen R.; Klayton, Tracy L.; Giovanardi, Stefano; Casertano, Stefano; Panagia, Nino; Terzian, Yervant (1999). "Hubble Space Telescope Measurements of the Expansion of NGC 6543: Parallax Distance and Nebular Evolution". Astronomical Journal 118 (5): 2430–2441. Bibcode 1999AJ....118.2430R. doi:10.1086/301091
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