Sloan Digital Sky Survey
SkyServer DR12  
Not logged in Login Help
 

DR12 Projects
 Basic
     - Solar System
     - Scavenger Hunt
     - The Universe
     - Asteroids
     - Types of Stars
     - Color
     - Galaxies
 Advanced
 Research Challenges
 For Kids
 User Activities
 Games and Contests
 Links to Others

The Universe
 Your Cosmic Address
 How Big is It?
 Expanding Universe
 How do We Know?
 Distances
 Magnitudes
 Redshifts
 Making the Diagram
 Diagram and Universe
 The Big Bang
 More Galaxies
 Research Challenges
 Your Results

The Universe: How Big Is It?

How big is the universe? For a long time, people believed the universe was infinitely big: it went on forever in every direction. Today, we know that is not true. The universe does end somewhere very far way. But the end is so far away that our regular units of distance are no longer useful to measure it.

The distance from New York City to Los Angeles is about 4,000 kilometers (2,500 miles). The distance from the Earth to the moon is 356,000 kilometers (221,000 miles). The distance from the Earth to the Sun is 150,000,000 kilometers (93,000,000 miles). The distance to even the nearest star is more than 40,000,000,000,000 kilometers (25,000,000,000,000). You can see that our regular units of distance don't work for the size of the universe.

Instead, astronomers use a unit of distance called the light-year. One light-year is the distance that light travels in one year: one light-year is equal to 9,458,000,000,000 kilometers (5,877,000,000,000 miles). Using this new unit makes astronomical distances easier to express: the nearest star is 4.3 light-years away. (Remember that the star is still the same distance away, whether we express it as 40,000,000,000,000 kilometers or 4.3 light-years).

Exercise 1. Using modern telescopes, we can see galaxies more than 12 billion light-years away. How far is this in kilometers? What is this distance expressed in scientific notation? Why is it easier to use scientific notation to write this number?