Fathom to Light Year Converter
Convert fathoms to light years with our free online length converter.
Quick Answer
1 Fathom = 1.932988e-16 light years
Formula: Fathom × conversion factor = Light Year
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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Fathom to Light Year Calculator
How to Use the Fathom to Light Year Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Fathom).
- The converted value in Light Year will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Length category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Fathom to Light Year: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Fathom to Light Year involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Fathom = 1.9330e-16 light yearsExample Calculation:
Convert 10 fathoms: 10 × 1.9330e-16 = 1.9330e-15 light years
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
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Need to convert to other length units?
View all Length conversions →What is a Fathom and a Light Year?
The Six-Foot Maritime Standard
The fathom is defined as exactly 6 feet in the imperial and U.S. customary measurement systems.
Precise equivalents:
- 6 feet (by definition)
- 2 yards (6 ft ÷ 3 ft/yd)
- 72 inches (6 ft × 12 in/ft)
- 1.8288 meters (exactly, using 1 ft = 0.3048 m)
- 182.88 centimeters
Historical basis: The arm span of an average man with arms fully outstretched, measured from fingertip to fingertip.
Arm Span Origins
Old English "fæthm":
- Primary meaning: To embrace, encircle with outstretched arms
- Secondary meaning: The distance between fingertips when arms are extended
Practical measurement: Sailors hauling in sounding lines (weighted ropes for measuring depth) would pull hand-over-hand, with each arm span representing one fathom. This created a natural counting method:
- Drop weighted line overboard
- Haul in, counting arm spans
- Number of arm spans = depth in fathoms
Standardization necessity: Since arm spans varied (5.5-6.5 feet typically), maritime commerce required a fixed standard. The British settled on exactly 6 feet, matching the standardized foot of 12 inches.
Nautical Charts and Depth Contours
Fathom lines: Nautical charts show depth contours (lines connecting points of equal depth) traditionally measured in fathoms.
Common contour intervals:
- 1, 2, 3, 5, 10 fathoms: Shallow coastal waters
- 20, 50, 100 fathoms: Coastal navigation
- 500, 1,000 fathoms: Deep ocean
Chart notation: Depths written as plain numbers on charts (e.g., "45") indicate 45 fathoms unless otherwise specified. Modern charts often include a note: "Depths in fathoms" or "Depths in meters."
Anchor Cable and Chain
Shackle: One "shackle" of anchor chain traditionally equals 15 fathoms (90 feet / 27.43 m) in the Royal Navy and many navies worldwide.
Anchoring depth rule: Ships typically anchor with a scope (ratio of chain length to water depth) of 5:1 to 7:1 for safety.
Example:
- Water depth: 10 fathoms (60 feet)
- Required chain: 50-70 fathoms (300-420 feet)
- That's 3.3 to 4.7 shackles
1 light-year = 9,460,730,472,580,800 meters (EXACT)
The light-year is a unit of length in astronomy, defined as the distance light travels in one Julian year (exactly 365.25 days) in a vacuum. It is derived from:
1 light-year = (speed of light) × (1 Julian year)
1 ly = 299,792,458 m/s × 31,557,600 seconds
1 ly = 9,460,730,472,580,800 meters
Light-Year is Distance, Not Time
Common misconception: "Light-year measures time."
Reality: The light-year measures distance, using time as a reference.
Analogy:
- "New York is 3 hours from Boston" (3 hours of driving ≈ 180 miles)
- "Proxima Centauri is 4.24 years from Earth" (4.24 years of light travel ≈ 40 trillion km)
Both use time to describe distance, but they measure space, not duration.
Why Use Light-Years Instead of Kilometers?
Scale problem: Interstellar distances in kilometers are incomprehensible:
- Proxima Centauri: 40,208,000,000,000 km (40.2 trillion km)
- Andromeda Galaxy: 23,740,000,000,000,000,000 km (23.7 quintillion km)
Light-years make it intuitive:
- Proxima Centauri: 4.24 ly (4 years of light travel)
- Andromeda Galaxy: 2.5 million ly (we see it as it was 2.5 million years ago)
The "lookback time" advantage: Light-years automatically tell you when you're seeing an object. "100 light-years away" = "seeing it 100 years in the past."
Speed of Light: The Universal Constant
The light-year depends on the speed of light (c), one of nature's fundamental constants:
c = 299,792,458 meters per second (EXACT)
Key properties:
- Nothing with mass can travel at or exceed c
- Light travels at c in a vacuum, regardless of observer's motion (Einstein's relativity)
- c is the same in all reference frames (no "absolute rest" in the universe)
Scale:
- c = 299,792 km/s (~300,000 km/s)
- In 1 second: Light circles Earth 7.5 times
- In 1 minute: Light travels 18 million km (Earth to Sun in 8 min 19 sec)
- In 1 year: Light travels 9.46 trillion km (1 light-year)
Light-Year vs. Parsec vs. Astronomical Unit
Three distance units for different astronomical scales:
| Unit | Meters | Use Case | |----------|-----------|--------------| | Astronomical Unit (AU) | 1.496 × 10¹¹ m (150M km) | Solar System (planets, asteroids) | | Light-year (ly) | 9.461 × 10¹⁵ m (9.46T km) | Interstellar (nearby stars, galaxies) | | Parsec (pc) | 3.086 × 10¹⁶ m (30.86T km) | Professional astronomy (galactic/extragalactic) |
Conversions:
- 1 light-year = 63,241 AU (63,000× Earth-Sun distance)
- 1 parsec = 3.26 light-years = 206,265 AU
Why each exists:
- AU: Human-scale for our cosmic neighborhood
- Light-year: Intuitive for the public (distance = time × speed)
- Parsec: Technical (distance where 1 AU subtends 1 arcsecond parallax)
Astronomers often use parsecs in papers but light-years in public communication.
Note: The Fathom is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Light Year belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Fathom and Light Year
Ancient Maritime Practices (Pre-9th Century)
Mediterranean and Northern European sailors: Ancient mariners measured rope and depth using body-based units:
- Cubit: Elbow to fingertip (~18 inches)
- Pace: Two steps (~5 feet)
- Arm span: Outstretched arms (~6 feet)
Sounding lead: A heavy weight (lead sinker) attached to a marked line, dropped overboard to measure depth. Sailors counted arm spans as they hauled the line back aboard.
Old English Documentation (9th-11th Centuries)
Earliest references: Anglo-Saxon texts use "fæthm" for measuring rope lengths and describing distances.
Beowulf (8th-11th century): The epic poem mentions "fæthmas" in describing ocean depths and ship measurements.
Viking influence: Old Norse "faðmr" (similar arm-span measurement) influenced English usage through Viking contact and trade.
Medieval Standardization (13th-15th Centuries)
Edward I (1272-1307): English law under Edward I began standardizing measurements, including the fathom at 6 feet.
Admiralty regulations: The emerging Royal Navy needed consistent rope, sail, and depth measurements for shipbuilding and navigation.
Rope making: British rope makers sold cordage by the fathom, with standard lengths for anchor cables (120 fathoms = 1 cable length in some contexts).
Age of Exploration (15th-17th Centuries)
Navigation charts: Early nautical charts (portolan charts) began incorporating depth soundings in fathoms.
Captain James Cook (1768-1779): Cook's Pacific voyages produced meticulous charts with fathom-based depth measurements. His charts became templates for British Admiralty standards.
Example - HMS Endeavour soundings: Cook's logs record depths like "15 fathoms, sandy bottom" or "No bottom at 100 fathoms" (indicating depths exceeding 600 feet).
British Admiralty Charts (19th Century)
Hydrographic Office (founded 1795): The British Admiralty Hydrographic Office systematized global nautical chart production, standardizing fathoms for depth.
Matthew Fontaine Maury (1806-1873): American oceanographer Maury collaborated with the British to create standardized depth charts using fathoms, mapping ocean currents and depths.
Cable-laying expeditions: Transatlantic telegraph cable projects (1850s-1860s) required precise fathom-based depth surveys. HMS Agamemnon and USS Niagara charted the Atlantic floor in fathoms before laying the 1858 cable.
U.S. Navy Adoption (19th-20th Centuries)
Inherited British standards: The U.S. Navy adopted British maritime practices, including fathom-based charts and anchor cable measurements.
U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey: Founded in 1807 (originally "Survey of the Coast"), it produced nautical charts in fathoms for American waters.
World War II: Submarine warfare and amphibious operations relied heavily on fathom-based depth charts. USS submarines operated in waters charted in fathoms.
Metrication Movement (20th Century-Present)
International Hydrographic Organization (IHO, founded 1921): Recommended global adoption of metric system for nautical charts.
Gradual transition:
- 1970s-1980s: Most nations began publishing new charts in meters
- UK Admiralty: Converted most charts to meters by the 1990s
- U.S. NOAA: Many American charts still use fathoms, particularly for coastal waters
Mixed usage today: Modern electronic chart systems (ECDIS) allow display in either fathoms or meters, accommodating mariners accustomed to either system.
Pre-Light-Speed Era (Ancient - 1676)
Ancient assumptions: For millennia, humans assumed light traveled instantaneously. Aristotle (4th century BCE) argued light had no travel time—"light is the presence of something, not motion."
Galileo's failed experiment (1638): Galileo attempted to measure light speed using lanterns on distant hills. One person uncovers a lantern; another uncovers theirs upon seeing the first. The delay would reveal light's speed.
Result: No detectable delay (light travels 300,000 km/s; Galileo's hills were ~1 km apart, giving a 0.000003-second delay—impossible to measure with 17th-century tools).
Ole Rømer's Breakthrough (1676)
The observation: Danish astronomer Ole Rømer studied Jupiter's moon Io, which orbits Jupiter every 42.5 hours. He noticed Io's eclipses (passing behind Jupiter) occurred earlier when Earth was approaching Jupiter and later when Earth was receding.
The insight: The discrepancy wasn't Io's orbit—it was light travel time. When Earth was closer to Jupiter, light had less distance to travel; when farther, more distance.
Calculation:
- Earth's orbital diameter: ~300 million km (2 AU)
- Io eclipse time difference: ~22 minutes
- Light speed: 300 million km / 22 min ≈ 227,000 km/s
Result: First proof that light has finite speed (underestimated by 24%, but revolutionary).
Implication: If light takes time to travel, then distances could be measured in "light travel time"—the seed of the light-year concept.
Stellar Aberration (1728)
James Bradley's discovery: Bradley observed that stars appear to shift position annually in small ellipses (aberration), caused by Earth's orbital motion combined with light's finite speed.
Analogy: Raindrops fall vertically, but if you run, they appear to come at an angle. Similarly, Earth's motion makes starlight appear tilted.
Calculation: Bradley measured aberration angle (~20 arcseconds) and Earth's orbital speed (30 km/s):
c = (Earth's speed) / tan(aberration angle)
c ≈ 301,000 km/s
Result: Refined light speed to within 0.4% of the modern value.
First Stellar Distance (1838)
Friedrich Bessel's parallax measurement: Bessel measured the parallax of 61 Cygni—the first successful stellar distance measurement. As Earth orbits the Sun, nearby stars appear to shift against distant background stars.
Result: 61 Cygni is 10.3 light-years away (modern: 11.4 ly).
Significance: Bessel's work required thinking in "light travel distance." Though he didn't use the term "light-year," his 1838 paper calculated: "Light from 61 Cygni takes 10.3 years to reach Earth."
The term "light-year" emerges: By the 1850s-1860s, astronomers adopted "light-year" for convenience. Early spellings varied ("light year," "light-year," "lightyear"), but "light-year" standardized by 1900.
Terrestrial Light-Speed Measurements (1849-1862)
Armand Fizeau (1849): First terrestrial measurement of light speed using a rotating toothed wheel. Light passed through a gap, reflected off a mirror 8.6 km away, and returned. By spinning the wheel faster, the light could be blocked by the next tooth.
Result: 315,000 km/s (5% high, but groundbreaking).
Léon Foucault (1862): Improved Fizeau's method using rotating mirrors. Achieved 298,000 km/s (within 1% of modern value).
Albert Michelson (1879-1926): Refined measurements to extreme precision:
- 1879: 299,910 km/s
- 1926: 299,796 km/s (within 12 km/s of modern value)
The Meter Redefinition (1983)
The problem: The meter was defined as 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the North Pole (via Paris), later refined using a platinum-iridium bar. But this was imprecise—the bar's length changed with temperature.
The solution: In 1983, the International Bureau of Weights and Measures redefined the meter in terms of the speed of light:
1 meter = distance light travels in 1/299,792,458 of a second
This fixed the speed of light at exactly 299,792,458 m/s, making the light-year a derived but precise unit:
1 ly = 299,792,458 m/s × 31,557,600 s = 9,460,730,472,580,800 m (EXACT)
Implication: The meter is now defined by light. The light-year, parsec, and astronomical unit all derive from this constant.
Modern Cosmology (20th-21st Century)
Edwin Hubble (1924-1929): Hubble measured distances to galaxies, proving the universe extends far beyond the Milky Way. Andromeda Galaxy: 2.5 million light-years (originally underestimated at 900,000 ly).
Hubble's Law (1929): Galaxies recede from us at speeds proportional to their distance. The farther away, the faster they move (universe is expanding).
Cosmic microwave background (1965): Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson detected the CMB—light from 380,000 years after the Big Bang, now 13.8 billion light-years away (but due to expansion, the source is now 46 billion light-years distant).
James Webb Space Telescope (2022): JWST observed galaxies 13.4 billion light-years away—seeing the universe as it was 400 million years after the Big Bang.
The observable universe: The farthest light we can see is 46 billion light-years away (accounting for cosmic expansion). Beyond this, the universe has expanded so much that light hasn't reached us yet.
Common Uses and Applications: fathoms vs light years
Explore the typical applications for both Fathom (imperial/US) and Light Year (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for fathoms
1. Nautical Charts and Hydrography
Depth soundings: Nautical charts mark depths in fathoms, particularly on U.S. and older British charts.
Contour lines: Lines connecting equal depths (e.g., the 10-fathom line) help mariners avoid shallow areas.
Chart abbreviations:
- fms: Fathoms
- fm: Fathom
- No bottom at 100 fms: Depth exceeds 100 fathoms (600 feet)
2. Anchoring and Mooring
Anchor scope: Mariners calculate how much anchor chain to deploy based on water depth in fathoms.
Rule of thumb: Deploy 5-7 times the water depth in calm conditions, 7-10 times in storms.
Example:
- Depth: 8 fathoms
- Calm weather scope (5:1): 40 fathoms of chain
- Storm scope (10:1): 80 fathoms of chain
3. Commercial Fishing
Net depth: Fishermen describe trawl net depths in fathoms.
Example: "Running trawl at 50 fathoms" (300 feet deep)
Fishing line: Deep-sea fishing lines measured in fathoms to target specific depths.
4. Recreational Boating and Diving
Depth sounders: Many recreational boat depth finders display fathoms (though meters and feet are increasingly common).
Dive planning: Divers reference depth in fathoms on nautical charts when planning dive sites.
5. Submarine Operations
Periscope depth: Submarines traditionally use fathoms for depth control.
Example: "Dive to 20 fathoms" (120 feet)
Historical note: WWII submarine logs recorded depths in fathoms; modern submarines use meters.
6. Maritime Literature and Tradition
Nautical expressions:
- "To fathom something" = to understand its depth (metaphorically)
- "Unfathomable" = too deep to measure or comprehend
Sailing instructions: Traditional pilot books use fathoms for approach depths and anchorage recommendations.
When to Use light years
1. Stellar Distances and Exoplanets
Astronomers use light-years to describe distances to stars and planetary systems.
Example: TRAPPIST-1 system
- Distance: 39 ly
- 7 Earth-sized planets, 3 in habitable zone
- Red dwarf star, 9% Sun's mass
- Discovered: 2017 (Spitzer Space Telescope)
Example: Kepler-452b ("Earth's cousin")
- Distance: 1,400 ly
- Orbits a Sun-like star in the habitable zone
- 1.6× Earth's diameter
- Potentially rocky with liquid water
Exoplanet nomenclature:
- "HD 209458 b is 159 ly away" (hot Jupiter, first exoplanet with detected atmosphere)
- "Proxima b is 4.24 ly away" (nearest potentially habitable exoplanet)
2. Galactic Structure and Astronomy
Milky Way dimensions:
- Diameter: ~100,000 ly
- Thickness (disk): ~1,000 ly
- Sun's distance from galactic center: 26,000 ly
- Galactic rotation: Sun orbits the galaxy every 225-250 million years (1 "galactic year")
Spiral arms:
- Milky Way has 4 major arms: Perseus, Scutum-Centaurus, Sagittarius, Norma
- Sun is in the Orion Arm (minor spur between Perseus and Sagittarius)
Globular clusters:
- Spherical collections of ancient stars orbiting the Milky Way
- M13 (Hercules Cluster): 25,000 ly
- Omega Centauri: 15,800 ly (largest globular cluster, 10 million stars)
3. Cosmology and the Expanding Universe
Hubble's Law:
v = H₀ × d
Where:
- v = recession velocity (km/s)
- H₀ = Hubble constant (70 km/s per megaparsec ≈ 21.5 km/s per million light-years)
- d = distance (light-years)
Example: A galaxy 100 million light-years away recedes at:
v = 21.5 km/s/Mly × 100 Mly = 2,150 km/s
Cosmological redshift: As the universe expands, light stretches to longer wavelengths (redshift). The farther the galaxy, the greater the redshift.
z = (observed wavelength - emitted wavelength) / emitted wavelength
- z = 0: No redshift (nearby objects)
- z = 1: Wavelength doubled (universe half its current size)
- z = 6: Early galaxies (universe 1/7 its current size)
- z = 1,100: CMB (universe 1/1,100 its current size)
4. Lookback Time (Viewing Cosmic History)
Every light-year is a journey into the past.
10 ly: Early 2010s (when smartphones became ubiquitous) 100 ly: 1920s (Roaring Twenties, right after WWI) 1,000 ly: Dark Ages/Early Middle Ages (Vikings, fall of Rome) 10,000 ly: End of last Ice Age, dawn of agriculture 100,000 ly: Early Homo sapiens, before language 1 million ly: Human ancestors, stone tools 13.8 billion ly: 380,000 years after the Big Bang (CMB)
The cosmic horizon: We can't see beyond 46 billion ly (comoving distance). Light from farther hasn't reached us yet.
5. SETI and Interstellar Communication
Drake Equation: Estimates the number of active, communicative civilizations in the Milky Way. Light-years define the "communication horizon."
Example: If a civilization 100 ly away sent a radio signal in 1924, we'd receive it in 2024. If we reply, they'd get our message in 2124—a 200-year round trip.
Fermi Paradox: "Where is everybody?" If intelligent life exists, why haven't we detected it?
- Milky Way is 100,000 ly across
- Radio signals travel at light speed
- A civilization 50,000 ly away could have sent signals 50,000 years ago (we might receive them in 25,000 years)
SETI targets:
- Tau Ceti (11.9 ly): Sun-like star with planets
- Epsilon Eridani (10.5 ly): Young star with debris disk
- Proxima Centauri (4.24 ly): Nearest star, has a habitable-zone planet
6. Science Fiction and Cultural Impact
Star Trek:
- Warp speed: Faster-than-light travel
- "Warp 1" = speed of light (c)
- "Warp 9" = 1,516× c (covers 1,516 ly in 1 year)
- Necessity: Alpha Centauri (4.24 ly) takes 4.24 years at light speed—impractical for storytelling
Interstellar travel challenges:
- Nearest star: 4.24 ly at light speed (current fastest spacecraft: Voyager 1 at 0.006% c would take 75,000 years)
- Time dilation: At 99.9% c, 4.24 years pass on Earth, but only 60 days for travelers (Einstein's relativity)
- Energy: Accelerating 1 kg to 10% c requires 4.5 × 10¹⁴ joules (100,000× a car's gasoline tank)
Generation ships: If we can't go faster than light, use multi-generational spacecraft:
- 10,000-year journey to Proxima Centauri at 0.04% c
- Crew born, live, and die onboard
- Descendants arrive
7. Educational Outreach
Light-years make the universe accessible to the public.
Analogy: "Andromeda is 2.5 million light-years away" = "We see Andromeda as it was 2.5 million years ago, before Homo sapiens evolved."
Scale models: If the Solar System fit in your hand (Sun to Neptune = 10 cm):
- Proxima Centauri: 2.7 km away
- Galactic center: 13,000 km away (Earth's diameter!)
- Andromeda: 125,000 km away (to the Moon and back, 1.5 times)
Additional Unit Information
About Fathom (fath)
How many feet are in a fathom?
Exactly 6 feet = 1 fathom.
This is the defining relationship. The fathom was standardized to 6 feet during medieval English measurement standardization.
How many meters are in a fathom?
1 fathom = 1.8288 meters (exactly).
This conversion uses the international foot definition: 1 foot = 0.3048 meters (exactly).
Calculation: 6 feet × 0.3048 m/ft = 1.8288 m
Is the fathom an SI unit?
No, the fathom is not an SI unit.
It belongs to the imperial and U.S. customary systems. The SI unit of length is the meter.
International usage: The International Hydrographic Organization recommends meters for nautical charts, but fathoms remain legal and common in U.S. and some British waters.
Is the fathom still commonly used today?
Yes, in specific maritime contexts, especially in the United States.
Still common:
- U.S. NOAA nautical charts (many coastal charts)
- Recreational boating in the U.S.
- Commercial fishing fleets
- Maritime tradition and literature
Declining usage:
- International shipping (uses meters)
- Most modern navies (switched to meters)
- New chart production (increasingly metric)
Result: Fathoms persist in American waters and traditional maritime communities but are gradually being replaced by meters in international contexts.
Where does the word "fathom" come from?
From Old English "fæthm" (outstretched arms, embrace).
Etymology:
- Proto-Germanic: *faþmaz (embrace, armful)
- Old English: fæthm (span of outstretched arms)
- Middle English: fadme, fathme
- Modern English: fathom
Original meaning: The distance between fingertips when a person extends both arms horizontally—roughly 6 feet for an average man.
Verb form: "To fathom" originally meant "to measure depth with outstretched arms," later metaphorically "to comprehend deeply" (exploring the depths of understanding).
Why are anchor chains measured in shackles, not fathoms?
Both are used, but shackles are standard for large vessels.
Shackle definition: 1 shackle = 15 fathoms = 90 feet = 27.43 meters
Reason: Anchor chains are physically connected with shackle links every 15 fathoms. These physical shackles allow disconnection for maintenance and provide visual/tactile markers when deploying chain.
Usage:
- Small vessels: Anchor chain length in fathoms
- Large vessels and navies: Anchor chain length in shackles
Example: "Deploy 5 shackles" = 75 fathoms = 450 feet of chain
How deep is "full fathom five"?
5 fathoms = 30 feet = 9.144 meters.
Shakespeare's The Tempest: Ariel's song describes a drowned man lying at the bottom, 5 fathoms below the surface.
Context: 30 feet is deep enough that:
- Surface light barely reaches the body
- Free diving without equipment is challenging
- The body would be difficult to recover without specialized equipment
This depth creates the eerie, unreachable quality of Ariel's description.
Can I convert my depth sounder from fathoms to meters?
Yes, most modern depth sounders (fishfinders, chartplotters) allow unit selection.
Typical options:
- Feet
- Fathoms
- Meters
How to change (general steps):
- Access settings menu
- Find "Units" or "Depth Units"
- Select preferred unit (fathoms, feet, or meters)
- Save settings
Check manual: Specific instructions vary by manufacturer (Garmin, Lowrance, Raymarine, Furuno, etc.).
What's the difference between fathoms and cable lengths?
Both are nautical length units, but they measure different things:
Fathom:
- 6 feet / 1.8288 meters
- Primarily for depth measurement
Cable length:
- UK: 608 feet = 185.3 meters (1/10 nautical mile)
- US (historical): 720 feet = 219.5 meters (120 fathoms)
- Primarily for horizontal distance (anchor cable, ship-to-ship spacing)
Confusion: The term "cable" sometimes referred to 100 or 120 fathoms of anchor cable, but the standardized "cable length" unit differs from this.
Do submarines still use fathoms?
Historically yes, but modern submarines use meters.
World War II era: U.S. and British submarines recorded depths in fathoms (e.g., "Dive to 50 fathoms").
Modern practice:
- U.S. Navy: Switched to feet and meters for submarine operations
- International: Nearly all modern navies use meters
Reason for change: International standardization, digital instrumentation, and NATO interoperability drove metrication.
About Light Year (ly)
1. Is a light-year a unit of time or distance?
Distance. Despite the name containing "year," the light-year measures distance—how far light travels in one year.
Analogy: "New York is 3 hours from Boston" means 3 hours of driving (distance ~180 miles), not that New York exists for 3 hours.
Why the confusion? The name uses time (year) as a reference, but the quantity measured is distance (9.46 trillion km).
Correct usage:
- "Proxima Centauri is 4.24 light-years away" (distance)
- "Light takes 4.24 years to reach us from Proxima Centauri" (time)
2. How far is a light-year in kilometers and miles?
Exactly 9,460,730,472,580,800 meters.
Rounded values:
- Metric: ~9.46 trillion km (9.461 × 10¹² km)
- Imperial: ~5.88 trillion miles (5.879 × 10¹² mi)
Why "exactly"? Since 1983, the meter is defined via the speed of light (exactly 299,792,458 m/s). A Julian year is exactly 31,557,600 seconds. Thus:
1 ly = 299,792,458 m/s × 31,557,600 s = 9,460,730,472,580,800 m (EXACT)
3. What is the closest star to Earth in light-years?
Excluding the Sun: Proxima Centauri at 4.24 light-years.
Including the Sun: The Sun at 0.0000158 light-years (1 AU, 8 min 19 sec light travel time).
Proxima Centauri details:
- Part of Alpha Centauri system (triple star: A, B, Proxima)
- Red dwarf, 12% Sun's mass
- Has at least 1 confirmed planet (Proxima b) in the habitable zone
Why no closer stars? Space is mostly empty. The next nearest star after Proxima is Barnard's Star (5.96 ly).
Perspective: At Voyager 1's speed (17 km/s), reaching Proxima Centauri would take 75,000 years.
4. How long does it take light to travel 1 light-year?
Exactly 1 Julian year = 365.25 days.
This is the definition: A light-year is the distance light travels in one year.
Breakdown:
- 1 year = 365.25 days
- 1 day = 86,400 seconds
- 1 year = 31,557,600 seconds
- At 299,792,458 m/s, light travels 9,460,730,472,580,800 m in 1 year
Implication: If you see a star 100 light-years away, the light left that star 100 years ago. You're viewing the past.
5. Why use light-years instead of kilometers for measuring space?
Convenience and intuition.
Interstellar distances in kilometers are incomprehensible:
- Proxima Centauri: 40,208,000,000,000 km (40.2 trillion km)
- Andromeda Galaxy: 23,740,000,000,000,000,000 km (23.7 quintillion km)
In light-years:
- Proxima Centauri: 4.24 ly
- Andromeda Galaxy: 2.5 million ly
Lookback time advantage: Light-years automatically convey when you're seeing something. "Betelgeuse is 548 ly away" means you see it as it was in 1476 (Renaissance).
Human brains handle ratios better than enormous numbers.
6. Can anything travel faster than light?
No object with mass can reach or exceed the speed of light (Einstein's special relativity).
Why: As an object approaches light speed, its relativistic mass increases, requiring infinite energy to reach c.
Exceptions (not "faster than light" but close):
- Tachyons (hypothetical): Particles that always travel faster than c (never proven to exist)
- Expansion of space: Distant galaxies recede faster than c due to cosmic expansion (space itself expands, objects don't move through space faster than c)
- Quantum entanglement: Information can't be transmitted faster than c, but entangled particles correlate instantaneously (doesn't violate relativity—no usable information transferred)
Warp drives (theoretical): Alcubierre drive concept: Compress space in front, expand behind. You stay stationary in a "bubble," but the bubble moves faster than c. Requires exotic matter (negative energy density), which may not exist.
7. What is the farthest object we can see in light-years?
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB): 46 billion light-years (comoving distance).
Why farther than 13.8 billion ly (age of universe)? The universe has been expanding. Light from the CMB took 13.8 billion years to reach us, but the source is now 46 billion ly away due to expansion.
Farthest observed galaxy: JADES-GS-z13-0 (James Webb Space Telescope, 2022)
- Light travel time: 13.4 billion years
- We see it as it was 400 million years after the Big Bang
- Current distance (comoving): ~32 billion ly
Observable universe: Radius: 46 billion ly (sphere of ~550 sextillion km radius). Beyond this, light hasn't reached us yet.
8. How do astronomers measure distances in light-years?
Method depends on distance:
1. Parallax (nearby stars, <1,000 ly): As Earth orbits the Sun (2 AU baseline), nearby stars shift against distant background stars. Measuring the parallax angle gives distance.
Formula:
distance (parsecs) = 1 / parallax angle (arcseconds)
distance (ly) = 3.26 / parallax angle
Example: Proxima Centauri has 0.7687 arcsecond parallax → 1.30 pc = 4.24 ly
2. Standard candles (intermediate, 1,000-1 billion ly): Objects with known intrinsic brightness (Cepheid variables, Type Ia supernovae). Measure apparent brightness, calculate distance.
3. Redshift (distant galaxies, >1 billion ly): Universe expansion stretches light (redshift). Greater redshift = greater distance. Use Hubble's Law and cosmological models.
9. Why do astronomers sometimes use parsecs instead of light-years?
Parsecs (pc) are more natural for parallax measurements (the primary method for measuring stellar distances).
Definition: 1 parsec = distance at which 1 AU subtends 1 arcsecond of parallax
Conversion: 1 parsec = 3.26 light-years
Usage:
- Professional astronomy: Parsecs, kiloparsecs (kpc), megaparsecs (Mpc)
- Public communication: Light-years (more intuitive)
Example:
- Galactic center: 8 kpc (professional) = 26,000 ly (public)
Why parsecs exist: They simplify calculations. Distance (pc) = 1 / parallax angle (arcseconds). Using light-years requires extra conversion steps.
10. What does it mean to "look back in time"?
Every photon carries a timestamp. Light takes time to travel, so we see distant objects as they were when the light left.
Examples:
- Sun (8 light-minutes): You see it as it was 8 minutes ago
- Proxima Centauri (4.24 ly): You see it as it was 4.24 years ago (2020 if viewing in 2024)
- Andromeda (2.5 million ly): You see it as it was 2.5 million years ago (before Homo sapiens)
- CMB (13.8 billion ly): You see the universe as it was 380,000 years after the Big Bang
Implication: Astronomy is historical science. The farther you look, the further back in time you see.
11. Could we ever travel to another star?
Theoretically yes, practically extraordinarily difficult.
Challenges:
1. Distance:
- Nearest star: Proxima Centauri (4.24 ly = 40.2 trillion km)
- Fastest spacecraft (Voyager 1): 17 km/s (0.006% light speed)
- Travel time at Voyager 1 speed: 75,000 years
2. Energy: Accelerating 1 kg to 10% light speed:
E ≈ 4.5 × 10¹⁴ joules (entire energy output of a small city for a year)
3. Time dilation: At 99% light speed, time slows for travelers (Einstein's relativity):
- Earth: 4.3 years pass
- Spacecraft: 7 months pass for crew
Proposed solutions:
- Generation ships: Multi-generational voyages (10,000+ years)
- Nuclear pulse propulsion (Project Orion): Explode nukes behind ship for thrust (10-20% c possible)
- Light sails (Breakthrough Starshot): Lasers push ultra-light probes to 20% c (reach Proxima in 20 years)
- Antimatter rockets: Matter-antimatter annihilation (100% mass-energy conversion, but antimatter production is prohibitively expensive)
12. What is the observable universe, and why is it 46 billion light-years if the universe is only 13.8 billion years old?
Observable universe = region from which light has had time to reach us.
Why 46 billion ly, not 13.8 billion ly? The universe has been expanding for 13.8 billion years. Objects whose light took 13.8 billion years to reach us have moved farther away due to expansion.
Example:
- Light from a galaxy left 13.4 billion years ago (400M years after Big Bang)
- During 13.4 billion years, the universe expanded
- That galaxy is now ~32 billion ly away
Comoving vs. light travel distance:
- Light travel distance: How long light has been traveling (13.8 billion years max)
- Comoving distance: Where the object is now, accounting for expansion (46 billion ly radius)
Observable universe:
- Radius: 46 billion ly (comoving)
- Diameter: 93 billion ly
- Beyond this: Universe exists, but light hasn't reached us yet (and never will, due to accelerating expansion)
Conversion Table: Fathom to Light Year
| Fathom (fath) | Light Year (ly) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0 |
| 1 | 0 |
| 1.5 | 0 |
| 2 | 0 |
| 5 | 0 |
| 10 | 0 |
| 25 | 0 |
| 50 | 0 |
| 100 | 0 |
| 250 | 0 |
| 500 | 0 |
| 1,000 | 0 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Fathom to Light Year?
To convert Fathom to Light Year, enter the value in Fathom in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our length converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Fathom to Light Year?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Fathom and Light Year. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Light Year back to Fathom?
Yes! You can easily convert Light Year back to Fathom by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Light Year to Fathom converter page. You can also explore other length conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Fathom and Light Year?
Fathom and Light Year are both standard units used in length measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our length converter for more conversion options.
For more length conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
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Other Length Units and Conversions
Explore other length units and their conversion options:
- Meter (m) • Fathom to Meter
- Kilometer (km) • Fathom to Kilometer
- Hectometer (hm) • Fathom to Hectometer
- Decimeter (dm) • Fathom to Decimeter
- Centimeter (cm) • Fathom to Centimeter
- Millimeter (mm) • Fathom to Millimeter
- Inch (in) • Fathom to Inch
- Foot (ft) • Fathom to Foot
- Yard (yd) • Fathom to Yard
- Mile (mi) • Fathom to Mile
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Last verified: December 3, 2025