A light-year distance calculator that converts any cosmic distance between ten units — light-years, kilometres, astronomical units, parsecs, kiloparsecs, megaparsecs, and light-seconds through light-days — and instantly reports how long light takes to cross that distance. Fifteen named cosmic destinations from the Moon to the edge of the observable Universe are built in as one-click presets.
How it works
The calculator is built on three exact physical constants defined by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) and the International Astronomical Union (IAU):
- Speed of light: c = 299,792,458 m/s (exact, 2019 SI)
- Astronomical Unit: 1 AU = 149,597,870,700 m (IAU 2012, exact)
- Julian year: 1 yr = 365.25 × 86,400 s = 31,557,600 s
From these, the other units follow:
- Light-year: 1 ly = c × 31,557,600 s = 9.4607304725808 × 10^15 m
- Parsec: 1 pc = AU × (648,000 ÷ π) ≈ 3.08568 × 10^16 m = 3.26156 ly
Light travel time is then t = d ÷ c. No approximations are used anywhere in the chain.
Worked example: Proxima Centauri
Proxima Centauri lies 4.2441 light-years away. Converting step by step:
- Metres: 4.2441 × 9.4607 × 10^15 = 4.015 × 10^16 m
- Kilometres: 4.015 × 10^13 km (40.15 trillion km)
- Astronomical Units: 4.015 × 10^13 ÷ 1.496 × 10^11 = 268,440 AU
- Parsecs: 4.2441 ÷ 3.26156 = 1.3013 pc
- Light travel time: 4.2441 × 365.25 × 86,400 = 1.339 × 10^8 s ≈ 4.244 years
So the light reaching your eyes tonight from Proxima left that star in mid-2021 (if you are reading this in 2026). This is cosmic look-back time: telescopes are time machines.
Formula note
All conversions are a single multiplication or division by the appropriate ratio of metre-exact values. No trigonometry or relativistic corrections are applied — the distances here are proper distances at a given epoch (essentially ruler distances), not light-travel distances corrected for cosmic expansion. For objects within our galaxy the difference is negligible. For the Andromeda Galaxy (~2.5 Mly) and beyond, the comoving vs. light-travel distance distinction starts to matter at the 1–10% level, but for the purposes of education and general reference this calculator is accurate to many significant figures.
Why so many units?
Different communities use different units for practical reasons:
- Light-years — science communication, school textbooks, public astronomy
- Parsecs / kiloparsecs / megaparsecs — professional astronomy, cosmology papers
- Astronomical units — Solar System science, planetary missions
- Kilometres — engineering, space-probe navigation
- Light-seconds / minutes / hours — mission control signal-delay calculations
This tool covers all of them so you can move fluently between whichever context you are working in.