One Light Year at Snail Speed was created in 2003.
It is known as a light year.
Light years is a measurement of length (not time!), and was taken to use for the purpose of illustrating the wast distances in the galaxy and the universe. One light year is the distance in which light will travel during one year at the speed of Light ~3*10^8 m/s.
I guess u r talkin about light year. It is referred to as the distance travelled at the speed of light for a year. means if an object travels at a speed of light(3*10^8 m/s) for a year, the distance travelled by it is known as 1 light year.
"Meters per second" is a proper and wonderful unit for speed, but there's no answer to that question, because a 'light-year' is not a speed. It's a distance, defined as the distance that light travels through vacuum in one year. Speed of light in vacuum . . . 299,792,458 meters per second Length of 1 light-year . . . . . 9.4605284 × 1015 meters
In a vacuum, light always travels at the same speed, approximately 3 x 10^8 meters/second. In a year, there are 31556736 seconds, so light travels 9.5 x 10^15 meters. That unit is called a light year. More details are available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-year
Light travels 31,536,000 seconds in a year, just like, let's say, a snail that never stops creeping. But light travels farther than a snail does in the same time. For example, in a year, light travels 9,454,254,955,000 kilometers (5,874,601,673,000 miles).
It is known as a light year.
The speed of light is 299,792,485 meters per second so if you travelled at this speed for a whole year that would be a light year.
how far u can travel at the speed of light in a year
It is known as a light year.
"Light-year" is not a speed, it is a distance - the distance light travels in a year.The speed of light is 300,000 kilometers per second. If you multiply that by 3600 (seconds/hour), you get the speed in km/hour.
It doesn't work that way. The light-year is not used to measure the speed of light. It works the other way round: First, the speed of light is determined through other methods, then the distance called a light-year is calculated based on that measurements.
Well... yes, but it's not a very useful one. Light travels one light year in... one year. So the speed of light (which you cannot accelerate to) is about 1/8766 light years per hour.
A unit that is commonly used in astronomy is the light-year - the distance light travels in a year.
Exactly 1.000 year.
# The distance that light travels in a vacuum in one year, approximately 9.46 trillion (9.46 × 1012) kilometers or 5.88 trillion (5.88 × 1012) miles.
Depends on your speed. A light year is the distance light travels in a year. If you traveled slower it would take longer.Depends on the speed you are going.At the speed of light one year.See related question for details of a light yearJust like any other distance, it depends on the speed of travel.-- At the speed of light, radio, x-rays, etc., it takes 1 year.-- At 1 million miles per hour, it takes about 671 years.-- At 60 miles per hour, it takes about 11.2 million years.A light year is the distance that light will travel in one year in a vacuum. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second. So, light will travel about 5.8 trillion miles in one year. Now, to answer the question. The answer depends on how fast you are traveling. If you were in a space ship travelling 99.9999% the speed of light, it would take you about a year to travel a light year. Now, there is currently no human-made space craft, that we know of, that can travel that fast. The space shuttle travels at about 17,500 miles per hour. In order for the space shuttle to travel one light year, it would take about 38,262 years.