Instant · Precise · Universal
32 units available
6 categories total
To convert am to meters: multiply by 10⁻¹⁸. To convert meters to am: multiply by 10¹⁸.
1 am = 10⁻¹⁸ m = 10⁻⁹ nm = 0.001 fm. One meter contains 10¹⁸ attometers.
For example, 1 Attometer (am) = 1.057004e-34 Light Year (ly).
| Attometer (am) | Light Year (ly) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 1.057004e-35 |
| 0.5 | 5.285021e-35 |
| 1 | 1.057004e-34 |
| 2 | 2.114008e-34 |
| 5 | 5.285021e-34 |
| 10 | 1.057004e-33 |
| 25 | 2.642511e-33 |
| 50 | 5.285021e-33 |
| 100 | 1.057004e-32 |
| 500 | 5.285021e-32 |
| 1000 | 1.057004e-31 |
The attometer is an extremely small unit of length equal to 10⁻¹⁸ meters, or one quintillionth of a meter.
1 am = 10⁻¹⁸ m = 10⁻⁹ nm = 0.001 fm. One meter contains 10¹⁸ attometers.
To convert am to meters: multiply by 10⁻¹⁸. To convert meters to am: multiply by 10¹⁸.
Measuring quark interaction distances and the scale of fundamental particle phenomena.
The effective size of a quark is estimated at less than 1 attometer — far smaller than a proton (~1,000 am across).
Confusing attometers with angstroms (Å = 10⁻¹⁰ m). Attometers are 100 million times smaller than an angstrom.
Think of the prefix chain: milli (10⁻³), micro (10⁻⁶), nano (10⁻⁹), pico (10⁻¹²), femto (10⁻¹⁵), atto (10⁻¹⁸).
The light-year is the distance that light travels in one Julian year (365.25 days) in a vacuum, approximately 9.461 × 10¹⁵ meters.
1 ly = 9.4607 × 10¹⁵ m = 63,241 AU = 0.3066 pc ≈ 9.461 trillion km.
To convert ly to km: multiply by 9.461 × 10¹². To convert ly to parsecs: multiply by 0.3066.
Expressing distances to stars: Proxima Centauri ≈ 4.24 ly, Sirius ≈ 8.6 ly, Vega ≈ 25 ly.
When you see a star 100 light-years away, you're seeing it as it was 100 years ago — you're literally looking into the past.
Thinking a light-year is a unit of time — it's a unit of distance! It's how far light travels in one year.
Light speed = ~300,000 km/s. In one year, light covers ~9.46 trillion km. That distance is one light-year.



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