Within 5 parsecs of the Sun, there are about 20 known stars. This region is part of the local stellar neighborhood, which includes the closest stars like Proxima Centauri, Alpha Centauri A and B, and others. The number is relatively small due to the vast distances between stars in our galaxy.
1 Parsec = 3.26163626 light years
30,856,774,879,000,000 meters.
About 206,000 given that 1 parsec is 3.06 x 1013 km and 1 AU is 149.6 x 106 km __________________ 1 Astronomical Unit (AU) is the average distance from the Sun to the Earth, about 150 million kilometers or 93 million miles (approximately). We use AU when we talk about distances between objects WITHIN the solar system. One "parsec", or "parallax-second of arc", is the distance that an object would be (from Earth) if we measure a one second of arc difference in the relative direction of a "nearby" object, measured from one side of the Earth's orbit to the other. That gives us a baseline distance of 2 AU, about 300 million km or 186 million miles. You can calculate the distance of one parsec using trigonometry; the base of the triangle is 2AU, and the opposite angle is 1 second of arc (1/3600th of a degree). Roughly, one parsec is about 3.26 light years. We use parsecs to measure distance between stars, or between objects in the galaxy.
If you mean asteroids within our Solar System, then stars. In the Universe, there will be many more asteroids than stars.
Saturn does not have any stars. It is a planet within our solar system and does not produce its own light like stars do.
1 Parsec = 3.08568025 × 1013 kilometers.
1 parsec = 19,173,510,995,000 miles.
1 Parsec = 3.26163626 light years
1 parsec is 3.09 x 1016 meters.
It's the other way around - how many light yearsmake up a parsec? The answer is: 3.26 light years make up one parsec.
There are 19 trillion miles (31 trillion kilometres) in a parsec, which is an astromical measurement.
3.262 light years.
1 Parsec = 3.26163626 light years
30,856,774,879,000,000 meters.
A parsec is 3.0857×1016 meters, an angstrom is 10-10 meters. Divide the first by the second to get the amount of angstroms in a meter.
About 19 trillion miles.
1 parsec = 3.26 light years = 19,164,611,570,000 miles (rounded) 1 mile = 0.00000000000005218 parsec (rounded)