Light Years: Subjectivity and Distance Measurement

AI Thread Summary
Light years measure the distance light travels in one year and are not based on visibility. The speed of light in a vacuum is constant, making the light year a fixed distance regardless of an observer's visual capability. Various methods, such as bouncing laser beams off mirrors, are used to measure this distance accurately. Visibility may inform how we perceive celestial objects, but it does not influence the actual measurement of light years. Understanding these concepts clarifies the distinction between subjective visibility and objective distance measurement in astronomy.
neugie92
Messages
5
Reaction score
0
Light years-I just don't understand how something as subjective as visibilty, is used as a major indicator of distance. Isnt that subjective. What if some species had a million times the eye power than us humans, wouldn't they view the distance of let's say stars very differently because it wouldn't be as many 'light years' away from them.

Maybe I'm confused about how light years are actually measured, it just seems like using somethings visiblity to us, is a poor way to try to figure out actual distance.

Thoughts?
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org


A light year is the distance that light travels in a year. It has nothing to do with visibility.
 


mathman said:
A light year is the distance that light travels in a year. It has nothing to do with visibility.

but to meaure the distance traveled we base it on an increase or decrease in visibility? am I wrong?
 


There is no relation to visibility.

A light year is the distance light travels in one year. As the speed of light in vacuum is constant, this length is constant, too. It does not matter how good some eyes are.Edit: Looks like two topics got merged, as I posted the other replys were not in the thread.
 
Last edited:


neugie92 said:
but to meaure the distance traveled we base it on an increase or decrease in visibility? am I wrong?

Yes, you are wrong. I can turn on a laser beam and bounce it off of a mirror at a known distance from me to measure the speed of light. Then, knowing this speed, I just multiply it out and the resulting distance is 1 light-year. It has nothing to do with visibility. The laser could be a bazillion watts or 1 microwatt, it does not matter as that does not affect the speed of the beam.

Maybe you are confused over how we measure the distance to objects in space. There are a variety of methods, and Jimmy's links go over some of them.
 
Publication: Redox-driven mineral and organic associations in Jezero Crater, Mars Article: NASA Says Mars Rover Discovered Potential Biosignature Last Year Press conference The ~100 authors don't find a good way this could have formed without life, but also can't rule it out. Now that they have shared their findings with the larger community someone else might find an explanation - or maybe it was actually made by life.
TL;DR Summary: In 3 years, the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) telescope (or rather, a system of telescopes) should be put into operation. In case of failure to detect alien signals, it will further expand the radius of the so-called silence (or rather, radio silence) of the Universe. Is there any sense in this or is blissful ignorance better? In 3 years, the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) telescope (or rather, a system of telescopes) should be put into operation. In case of failure to detect...
This thread is dedicated to the beauty and awesomeness of our Universe. If you feel like it, please share video clips and photos (or nice animations) of space and objects in space in this thread. Your posts, clips and photos may by all means include scientific information; that does not make it less beautiful to me (n.b. the posts must of course comply with the PF guidelines, i.e. regarding science, only mainstream science is allowed, fringe/pseudoscience is not allowed). n.b. I start this...
Back
Top