A parsec is about 3.26 light-years and a kiloparsec (kpc) is a 1,000 parsecs.
1 Parsec = 3.26163626 light years
1 Parsec = 3.26163626 light years.
3.26 light years
1 parsec = 3.2616 light-years (rounded)1 mega-parsec = 3,261,600 light-years (rounded)5 mega-parsecs = 16,308,000 light-years (rounded)
There are two in common use; the "light year", which is the distance that light travels in one year, and the "parsec". The parsec is a "parallax-second of arc", the distance that an object would be from Earth if it appears to be separated by one second of arc as viewed from one side of the Earth's orbit and from the other side of the Earth's orbit. The "parsec" is approximately equal to 3.26 light years. For intergalactic distances, many astronomers use the "mega-parsec", one million parsecs distance, abbreviated as "Mpc".
About 19 trillion miles.
The answer to how many light years is M99 away from earth it is 25100 light years away!
At the speed of light 1.5 million years
It's the other way around - how many light yearsmake up a parsec? The answer is: 3.26 light years make up one parsec.
3.262 light years.
1 Parsec = 3.26163626 light years
1 parsec = 3.26 light years = 19,164,611,570,000 miles (rounded) 1 mile = 0.00000000000005218 parsec (rounded)
2,200,000 light years is 674,523 parsecs
3.26 light years = 1 parsec 77.5 light years = 23.8 parsecs
1 parsec = 3.2616 light-years (rounded)1 mega-parsec = 3,261,600 light-years (rounded)5 mega-parsecs = 16,308,000 light-years (rounded)
1 parsec = 3.26 light-years (rounded)520 parsecs = (520 x 3.26) = 1,695.2light-years
Assuming you mean "parsec", that's about 3.26 light-years.
One parsec is equivalent to 3.3 light years. 150 parsecs = 150 x 3.3 = 495 light years
No. The distance light travels in a year is called a light-year. A parsec is the distance at which a star (or other object) would have a yearly parallax of 1 arc-second, and it is equal to about 3.26 light-years.
According to Wikipedia, it is at a distance of 1,344 ± 20 light-years. I leave it to you to convert that to miles. It's probably better to leave that in light-years or convert to parsec.