Difference between revisions of "Light Year"
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
: The next nearest [[star]] to the [[Earth]], after [[The Sun]], is [[Alpha Centauri]] which is 4.23 [[Light Year]]s away. | : The next nearest [[star]] to the [[Earth]], after [[The Sun]], is [[Alpha Centauri]] which is 4.23 [[Light Year]]s away. | ||
: Our [[The Solar System|Solar System]] is in a [[galaxy]] called [[The Milky Way]] but the next [[galaxy]], [[Andromeda]] is 2,000,000 [[Light Year]]s away. | : Our [[The Solar System|Solar System]] is in a [[galaxy]] called [[The Milky Way]] but the next [[galaxy]], [[Andromeda]] is 2,000,000 [[Light Year]]s away. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Beyond the Curriculum== | ||
+ | {{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Op3AYaJc0Xw}} |
Revision as of 17:44, 20 April 2019
Contents
Key Stage 3
Meaning
A Light Year is the distance light can travel in one year in space.
About Light Years
- A Light Year is a distance.
- Scientists use Light Years as a unit for extremely large distances.
- A Light Year is around 9,461,000,000,000,000 metres. Since stars are much further away than this it doesn't make sense to write the distance in metres so scientists use the Light Year.
- The next nearest star to the Earth, after The Sun, is Alpha Centauri which is 4.23 Light Years away.
- Our Solar System is in a galaxy called The Milky Way but the next galaxy, Andromeda is 2,000,000 Light Years away.
Key Stage 4
Meaning
A Light Year is the distance light can travel in one year in space.
About Light Years
- A Light Year is a distance.
- Scientists use Light Years as a unit for extremely large distances.
- A Light Year is around 9,461,000,000,000,000 metres. Since stars are much further away than this it doesn't make sense to write the distance in metres so scientists use the Light Year.
- The next nearest star to the Earth, after The Sun, is Alpha Centauri which is 4.23 Light Years away.
- Our Solar System is in a galaxy called The Milky Way but the next galaxy, Andromeda is 2,000,000 Light Years away.