Hectometer to Astronomical Unit Converter

Convert hectometers to astronomical units with our free online length converter.

Quick Answer

1 Hectometer = 6.684492e-10 astronomical units

Formula: Hectometer × conversion factor = Astronomical Unit

Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.

Our Accuracy Guarantee

All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.

Last verified: December 2025Reviewed by: Sam Mathew, Software Engineer

Hectometer to Astronomical Unit Calculator

How to Use the Hectometer to Astronomical Unit Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Hectometer).
  2. The converted value in Astronomical Unit will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
  3. Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Length category.
  4. Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
Share:

How to Convert Hectometer to Astronomical Unit: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Hectometer to Astronomical Unit involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

1 Hectometer = 6.6845e-10 astronomical units

Example Calculation:

Convert 10 hectometers: 10 × 6.6845e-10 = 6.6845e-9 astronomical units

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.

Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.

What is a Hectometer and a Astronomical Unit?

The hectometer (symbol: hm) is a unit of length in the metric system. It is defined as exactly one hundred (100) meters, which is the base unit of length in the International System of Units (SI). Therefore, 1 kilometer equals 10 hectometers.

1 astronomical unit (AU) = 149,597,870,700 meters (EXACT)

The astronomical unit is a unit of length in astronomy and planetary science, representing the mean distance from Earth to the Sun. Since 2012, the AU has been a defined constant—exactly 149,597,870,700 m—rather than a measured quantity.

Why Not Just Use Kilometers?

Scale problem: Solar System distances in kilometers become unwieldy:

  • Earth to Sun: 149,597,871 km (hard to grasp)
  • Jupiter to Sun: 778,500,000 km (increasingly meaningless)
  • Neptune to Sun: 4,500,000,000 km (just a big number)

AU makes it intuitive:

  • Earth: 1.00 AU (baseline)
  • Jupiter: 5.20 AU (5× farther than Earth)
  • Neptune: 30.1 AU (30× Earth's distance)

The human brain handles ratios better than absolute numbers. "Neptune is 30 times farther from the Sun than Earth" is far more comprehensible than "Neptune is 4.5 billion kilometers from the Sun."

Light Travel Time

The AU has a natural time component:

1 AU = 8 minutes 19 seconds at the speed of light

  • Light from the Sun takes 8m 19s to reach Earth
  • If the Sun suddenly vanished, we wouldn't know for 8+ minutes
  • Solar flares and coronal mass ejections take this long to arrive
  • Real-time communication with spacecraft: Earth-Mars = 4-24 minutes one-way delay (depending on orbital positions)

AU vs. Light-Year vs. Parsec

Three different distance scales for different contexts:

| Unit | Meters | Use Case | |----------|-----------|--------------| | Astronomical Unit (AU) | 1.496 × 10¹¹ m | Solar System (planets, asteroids, comets) | | Light-year (ly) | 9.461 × 10¹⁵ m (63,241 AU) | Interstellar distances (nearest stars) | | Parsec (pc) | 3.086 × 10¹⁶ m (206,265 AU) | Galactic/extragalactic distances (parallax-based) |

Why each exists:

  • AU: Human-scale for our cosmic neighborhood
  • Light-year: Intuitive (distance light travels in a year)
  • Parsec: Technical (distance at which 1 AU subtends 1 arcsecond)

Note: The Hectometer is part of the metric (SI) system, primarily used globally in science and trade. The Astronomical Unit belongs to the imperial/US customary system.

History of the Hectometer and Astronomical Unit

The hectometer originates from the French Revolution era, alongside the development of the metric system in the 1790s. The system aimed for rational, decimal-based units derived from the meter. The prefix "hecto-" (derived from Greek "hekaton" meaning hundred) signifies a factor of one hundred (10²). While the meter and kilometer became the more common standards for many applications, the hectometer was defined as part of the systematic decimal structure of the metric system.

Ancient Underestimates (300 BCE - 1500 CE)

Aristarchus of Samos (3rd century BCE): The first known attempt to measure the Earth-Sun distance. Using lunar phases and geometry, Aristarchus estimated the Sun was 18-20 times farther than the Moon. His method was sound, but observational limitations led to severe underestimation.

Actual ratio: Sun is ~400× farther than the Moon, not 20×.

Ptolemy's geocentric model (2nd century CE): Ptolemy's Almagest placed the Sun relatively close—around 1,200 Earth radii (~7.6 million km), about 5% of the true distance. This underestimation persisted for 1,400 years during the geocentric era.

Copernican Revolution (1543-1600s)

Nicolaus Copernicus (1543): De revolutionibus orbium coelestium established the heliocentric model. While Copernicus correctly ordered the planets, his distance estimates were still too small—placing the Sun about 20 million km away (13% of the actual distance).

Johannes Kepler (1609-1619): Kepler's laws of planetary motion (published in Astronomia Nova and Harmonices Mundi) enabled calculation of relative planetary distances. If Earth's orbit is 1 AU, then:

  • Venus: 0.72 AU
  • Mars: 1.52 AU
  • Jupiter: 5.20 AU

Problem: Kepler knew the proportions, but not the absolute scale. What was the AU in meters or kilometers?

The Transit of Venus Method (1761-1769)

Edmond Halley's proposal (1716): Halley realized that observing Venus crossing the Sun's face (a "transit") from different Earth locations would create a parallax effect, enabling triangulation of the Earth-Sun distance.

1761 Transit of Venus: International expeditions to Siberia, South Africa, India, and the South Pacific. Observations were complicated by:

  • The "black drop effect" (Venus appearing to stick to the Sun's edge)
  • Cloudy weather disrupting measurements
  • Imprecise timekeeping

1769 Transit of Venus: More extensive global coordination:

  • Captain James Cook: Observed from Tahiti (Point Venus)
  • Charles Mason & Jeremiah Dixon: Observed from the Cape of Good Hope
  • Russian expeditions: Observed from Siberia

Result: Combined data yielded an Earth-Sun distance of approximately 153 million km, within 2% of the modern value (150M km). This was the first accurate measurement of the AU.

Why transits work: Observers at different latitudes see Venus cross the Sun along slightly different paths. The timing difference creates a parallax angle:

tan(parallax) = (Earth baseline) / (Earth-Sun distance)

With a known Earth baseline (distance between observation sites) and measured parallax, the AU could be calculated.

19th Century Refinement (1800-1900)

1874 and 1882 Transits of Venus: Equipped with photography and telegraph time-synchronization, astronomers improved AU measurements to ~149.5 million km.

Asteroid parallax (1898-1900): The asteroid 433 Eros passes closer to Earth than Venus, providing better parallax measurements. During Eros's 1900-1901 opposition, global observatories measured its position, refining the AU to 149.53 million km (±0.03%).

Term standardization: The phrase "astronomical unit" became standard in the late 19th century, replacing earlier terms like "solar distance" or "Earth's mean distance."

20th Century Precision (1961-2012)

Radar ranging to Venus (1961): The Goldstone Observatory and Jodrell Bank transmitted radar signals to Venus and measured the round-trip time. Since radio waves travel at the speed of light (c), the distance calculation was straightforward:

Distance = (c × round-trip time) / 2

Result: The AU was refined to 149,597,870 km (±1 km precision).

Radar ranging to Mars (1965-1976): Mariner and Viking spacecraft provided radar measurements, cross-verifying the Venus-based AU.

Viking landers (1976): Precise radio tracking of the Viking landers on Mars enabled AU measurements to sub-kilometer precision.

Jet Propulsion Laboratory ephemerides: JPL's Development Ephemeris (DE) models incorporated radar, spacecraft tracking, and lunar laser ranging. By 2000, the AU was known to meter-level precision.

IAU 2012 Redefinition

The problem: The AU was previously defined as "the radius of an unperturbed circular Newtonian orbit about the Sun of a particle having infinitesimal mass, moving with a mean motion of 0.01720209895 radians per day (the Gaussian gravitational constant)."

This definition was:

  1. Circular (tied to a theoretical model, not measurable)
  2. Dependent on the solar mass (which itself was measured in AU-based units)
  3. Subject to revision as measurements improved

The solution (IAU Resolution B2, 2012): The International Astronomical Union redefined the AU as a fixed constant:

1 AU = 149,597,870,700 meters (EXACT)

Why this matters:

  • Consistency: The AU no longer changes with better measurements of solar mass
  • Spacecraft navigation: JPL's navigation software uses this exact constant
  • Parallels SI units: Like the meter (defined via the speed of light), the AU is now a defined standard, not a derived quantity

Fun fact: The chosen value (149,597,870,700 m) was the best measurement available in 2012, now frozen as the definition.

Cultural and Scientific Impact

The AU represents humanity's growing comprehension of cosmic scale:

  • Ancient world: Sun thought to be ~10 million km away
  • Kepler era: Relative distances known, absolute scale uncertain
  • 1769: First accurate measurement (153M km, 2% error)
  • 1961: Radar precision (±1 km)
  • 2012: Defined as exact constant (no error—it IS the standard)

This progression mirrors the scientific method: hypothesis → observation → refinement → standardization.

Common Uses and Applications: hectometers vs astronomical units

Explore the typical applications for both Hectometer (metric) and Astronomical Unit (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.

Common Uses for hectometers

The hectometer is not frequently used in everyday language or general measurements compared to meters or kilometers. However, it finds niche applications in specific fields:

  • Agriculture and Forestry: Sometimes used for measuring land parcel dimensions or distances in large fields or forests where measurements are typically in the hundreds of meters.
  • Surveying: Can be used in land surveying, particularly in contexts where metric units are standard but kilometers are too large and meters too small for convenient expression of certain distances.
  • Meteorology: While not a length unit, the related unit hectopascal (hPa), using the same prefix, is the standard international unit for atmospheric pressure.
  • Radio Astronomy: Certain radio wavelengths might be expressed in hectometers.
  • Education: Useful in teaching the metric system to illustrate the powers of 10 and the relationship between different metric length units (1 km = 10 hm = 100 dam = 1000 m).

When to Use astronomical units

1. Planetary Science and Orbital Mechanics

The AU is the natural unit for describing planetary orbits using Kepler's laws.

Kepler's Third Law:

P² = a³

Where:

  • P = orbital period (Earth years)
  • a = semi-major axis (AU)

Example: Mars

  • Semi-major axis: 1.524 AU
  • Predicted period: √(1.524³) = √(3.540) = 1.881 Earth years
  • Actual period: 1.881 years (687 days) ✓

Why AU simplifies this: In SI units, Kepler's Third Law requires the gravitational constant G and solar mass M☉:

P² = (4π² / GM☉) × a³

Using AU and years, the constants vanish!

2. Asteroid and Comet Tracking

Orbital elements use AU:

  • Semi-major axis (a): Average orbital distance (AU)
  • Perihelion distance (q): Closest approach to Sun (AU)
  • Aphelion distance (Q): Farthest point from Sun (AU)

Example: Halley's Comet

  • Semi-major axis: 17.8 AU
  • Perihelion: 0.586 AU (inside Venus's orbit)
  • Aphelion: 35.1 AU (beyond Neptune)
  • Orbital period: 75-76 years

Near-Earth Object (NEO) classification:

  • Atens: Semi-major axis <1.0 AU, perihelion >0.983 AU
  • Apollos: Semi-major axis >1.0 AU, perihelion <1.017 AU
  • Amors: Semi-major axis >1.0 AU, perihelion 1.017-1.3 AU

3. Exoplanet Characterization

When astronomers discover exoplanets, they report orbital distances in AU for comparison with our Solar System.

Kepler-452b ("Earth's cousin"):

  • Star: G-type (Sun-like)
  • Distance from star: 1.05 AU
  • Orbital period: 385 days
  • Size: 1.6× Earth diameter
  • In habitable zone (liquid water possible)

TRAPPIST-1 system:

  • Star: Ultra-cool red dwarf (9% Sun's mass)
  • 7 planets: 0.011 to 0.063 AU (all closer than Mercury!)
  • 3 in habitable zone (TRAPPIST-1e, f, g)
  • Why so close? Red dwarf is dim, HZ is much nearer

Proxima Centauri b:

  • Distance from star: 0.0485 AU (7.3 million km)
  • Orbital period: 11.2 days
  • In habitable zone (red dwarf is faint)
  • Nearest potentially habitable exoplanet (4.24 light-years)

4. Mission Planning and Spacecraft Navigation

Delta-v budgets: Spacecraft missions calculate fuel requirements based on AU distances.

Hohmann transfer orbit (Earth to Mars):

  • Earth orbit: 1.00 AU (circular approximation)
  • Mars orbit: 1.52 AU
  • Transfer orbit semi-major axis: (1.00 + 1.52) / 2 = 1.26 AU
  • Travel time: Half the transfer orbit period ≈ 259 days (8.5 months)

Launch windows: Earth and Mars align favorably every 26 months (synodic period). Missing a window means waiting 2+ years.

Example: Perseverance rover

  • Launch: July 30, 2020
  • Landing: February 18, 2021
  • Distance traveled: ~480 million km (depends on orbital path, not straight-line)

5. Solar Wind and Space Weather

Heliosphere: The Sun's influence extends well beyond planetary orbits, measured in AU.

Termination shock: ~90 AU

  • Solar wind slows below sound speed
  • Voyager 1 crossed: 94 AU (2004)

Heliopause: ~120 AU

  • Boundary where solar wind meets interstellar medium
  • Voyager 1 crossed: 121 AU (2012)

Bow shock: ~150 AU

  • Where interstellar medium piles up against heliosphere

Oort Cloud: 2,000-100,000 AU

  • Spherical shell of icy comets surrounding Solar System
  • Gravitationally bound to the Sun, but barely

6. Educational and Outreach

The AU provides an intuitive scale for teaching Solar System structure.

Scale models: If Earth = 1 cm diameter:

  • Sun: 109 cm (1.09 m) diameter
  • Earth-Sun distance: 117 m (1 AU scale)
  • Jupiter: 11 cm diameter, 608 m from Sun
  • Neptune: 4 cm diameter, 3.5 km from Sun!

The "Voyage" scale model (Washington, D.C.):

  • 1:10 billion scale
  • Sun (Smithsonian): 1.39 m diameter sphere
  • Earth: 1.3 cm (grain of rice), 15 m away
  • Pluto: 0.2 cm, 590 m away

7. Historical Astronomy

Pre-AU era challenges: Before the AU was accurately measured, astronomers knew relative planetary positions but not absolute distances.

Example: Kepler knew...

  • Venus is 0.72× Earth's distance
  • Mars is 1.52× Earth's distance
  • Jupiter is 5.20× Earth's distance

...but NOT the actual Earth-Sun distance!

The AU filled this gap, providing the absolute scale.

Additional Unit Information

About Hectometer (hm)

How many hectometers are in a kilometer?

There are exactly 10 hectometers in 1 kilometer.

How many meters are in a hectometer?

There are exactly 100 meters in 1 hectometer.

How many decameters are in a hectometer?

There are exactly 10 decameters (dam) in 1 hectometer.

How do you convert hectometers to miles?

To convert hectometers to miles, multiply the number of hectometers by approximately 0.0621371. For example, 5 hm is about 5 * 0.0621371 = 0.3106855 miles.

Is the hectometer commonly used?

No, the hectometer is one of the less commonly used metric units in everyday practice. Meters and kilometers are generally preferred for most practical distance measurements.

Why isn't the hectometer used more often?

For many everyday distances (room sizes, building heights), meters provide a convenient scale. For longer distances (travel, road signs), kilometers are more practical. The hectometer often represents an intermediate scale (100 meters, roughly the length of a football field) that doesn't align as frequently with common measurement needs as meters or kilometers do.

About Astronomical Unit (AU)

1. Why use Astronomical Units instead of kilometers or miles?

Convenience and intuition.

Solar System distances in kilometers are unwieldy:

  • Jupiter: 778,500,000 km from the Sun
  • Neptune: 4,500,000,000 km

In AU:

  • Jupiter: 5.20 AU
  • Neptune: 30.1 AU

Human brains handle ratios better than large numbers. "Neptune is 30× farther from the Sun than Earth" is far more intuitive than "Neptune is 4.5 billion kilometers away."

Scientific advantage: Kepler's Third Law simplifies to P² = a³ when using AU and years, eliminating gravitational constants.

2. How many kilometers/miles is 1 AU?

Exactly 149,597,870.700 kilometers (since 2012 IAU definition).

Rounded values:

  • Metric: ~150 million km (1.496 × 10⁸ km)
  • Imperial: ~93 million miles (9.296 × 10⁷ mi)

Why "exactly"? As of 2012, the AU is a defined constant (like the speed of light), not a measured quantity. The meter is defined via the speed of light, and the AU is defined in meters, making it exact.

3. How long does it take light to travel 1 AU?

499.0 seconds = 8 minutes 19 seconds.

This is the "light travel time" from the Sun to Earth. When you see the Sun in the sky, you're seeing it as it was 8 minutes 19 seconds ago.

Implications:

  • Solar flares take 8m 19s to reach Earth
  • If the Sun vanished, we wouldn't know for 8+ minutes
  • Real-time communication with Mars: 4-24 minute one-way delay

Formula:

Time = distance / speed of light
Time = 149,597,870,700 m / 299,792,458 m/s = 499.0 seconds

4. What is the difference between AU, light-year, and parsec?

Three distance units for different scales:

| Unit | Definition | Meters | Use Case | |----------|---------------|-----------|--------------| | AU | Earth-Sun distance | 1.496 × 10¹¹ m | Solar System (planets, asteroids) | | Light-year | Distance light travels in 1 year | 9.461 × 10¹⁵ m | Interstellar (nearest stars) | | Parsec | Distance where 1 AU subtends 1 arcsec | 3.086 × 10¹⁶ m | Galactic/extragalactic |

Conversions:

  • 1 light-year = 63,241 AU
  • 1 parsec = 206,265 AU = 3.26 light-years

Why each exists:

  • AU: Intuitive for our cosmic neighborhood
  • Light-year: Public-friendly (distance light travels in a year)
  • Parsec: Technical (based on parallax measurements)

5. Why was the AU redefined in 2012?

To eliminate circular dependencies and fix the AU as a constant.

Old definition (pre-2012): The AU was tied to the Gaussian gravitational constant and solar mass, creating circular logic:

  • Solar mass measured in kg using AU-based planetary orbits
  • AU defined using solar mass
  • Improved measurements of one changed the other

New definition (IAU 2012): 1 AU = 149,597,870,700 meters (EXACT)

Benefits:

  1. Consistency: The AU never changes, even with better solar mass measurements
  2. Spacecraft navigation: JPL navigation software uses this exact constant
  3. Parallels SI system: Like the meter (defined via speed of light), AU is now a defined standard

Fun fact: The chosen value was the best 2012 measurement, now frozen as the definition.

6. How far has Voyager 1 traveled in AU?

164 AU as of 2024 (24.5 billion km from the Sun).

Journey milestones:

  • 1977: Launch from Earth (1 AU)
  • 1979: Jupiter flyby (5.2 AU)
  • 1980: Saturn flyby (9.5 AU)
  • 2004: Crossed termination shock (94 AU) — solar wind slowed
  • 2012: Entered interstellar space (121 AU) — crossed heliopause
  • 2024: 164 AU and counting

Speed: 3.6 AU/year (17 km/s relative to the Sun)

Perspective:

  • Voyager 1 has traveled 164× the Earth-Sun distance
  • It's traveled only 0.0026 light-years (0.26% of a light-year)
  • At this speed, it would take 75,000 years to reach Proxima Centauri (4.24 light-years)

7. What is the habitable zone in AU for our Solar System?

Approximately 0.95 to 1.37 AU for a Sun-like star.

Inner edge (0.95 AU): Too close → runaway greenhouse effect (like Venus at 0.72 AU)

  • Water vapor traps heat
  • Surface water evaporates
  • Planet becomes uninhabitable

Outer edge (1.37 AU): Too far → frozen surface (Mars at 1.52 AU is marginal)

  • Insufficient sunlight to maintain liquid water
  • CO₂ freezes, reducing greenhouse warming

Earth (1.00 AU): Perfect!

  • Liquid water oceans
  • Temperate climate (greenhouse effect keeps average ~15°C)

Mars (1.52 AU): Marginal

  • Thin atmosphere (lost over billions of years)
  • Surface water frozen, but subsurface ice exists
  • Past liquid water evidence (ancient river valleys)

Note: Habitable zone width depends on star type:

  • Red dwarfs (dim): HZ is 0.05-0.15 AU
  • Sun-like stars: HZ is 0.95-1.37 AU
  • Blue giants: HZ is 10+ AU (but these stars don't live long enough for life to evolve)

8. How accurate is the AU measurement?

Perfectly accurate since 2012—it's a defined constant.

Pre-2012: The AU was measured using radar ranging, spacecraft tracking, and orbital mechanics. By 2000, precision reached sub-meter levels.

Post-2012: The IAU defined the AU as exactly 149,597,870,700 meters. This isn't a "measurement" anymore—it's the standard, like the meter is defined via the speed of light.

What this means:

  • The AU has zero uncertainty (it's exact by definition)
  • Measurements of planetary distances are now in meters, not AU
  • The AU is a conversion factor (like 12 inches = 1 foot, exact)

9. Can you see 1 AU with the naked eye?

Yes! You're seeing across 1 AU whenever you look at the Sun.

What you're seeing:

  • The Sun's surface is 1 AU away
  • Sunlight takes 8 minutes 19 seconds to reach your eyes
  • You're seeing the Sun as it was 8+ minutes ago

Other 1 AU experiences:

  • Solar eclipses: Moon passes between Earth and Sun (~1 AU alignment)
  • Sunlight warmth: Solar energy intensity at 1 AU is 1,361 W/m² (solar constant)
  • Seasonal changes: Earth's 1 AU orbit, tilted 23.5°, creates seasons

10. How do astronomers measure AU distances?

Historically: Parallax, transits, and radar ranging. Now: The AU is a defined constant (not measured).

Historical methods:

1. Transits of Venus (1769): Observing Venus cross the Sun's face from different Earth locations enabled triangulation:

  • Parallax angle measured
  • Earth-Sun distance calculated: ~153 million km (2% error)

2. Radar ranging (1961+): Transmit radar to Venus/Mars, measure round-trip time:

Distance = (speed of light × round-trip time) / 2

Accuracy: Sub-kilometer precision

3. Spacecraft tracking (1976+): Viking landers on Mars, Voyager flybys, etc., provided precise radio ranging data.

Modern (2012+): The AU is defined as exactly 149,597,870,700 meters. Planetary distances are now measured in meters using spacecraft telemetry, and converted to AU using this exact constant.

11. Why don't we use AU for measuring distances to stars?

Because AU numbers become unwieldy for interstellar distances.

Example: Proxima Centauri (nearest star)

  • Distance: 268,000 AU
  • In light-years: 4.24 ly (much cleaner!)

It's like measuring New York to Tokyo in millimeters:

  • 11 trillion millimeters (accurate but awkward)
  • 11,000 kilometers (appropriate scale)

Astronomers do use AU for...

  • Stellar parallax calculations (1 AU baseline enables distance measurements)
  • Comparing exoplanet orbits to our Solar System

But for stellar distances:

  • Light-years: Public-friendly, intuitive
  • Parsecs: Professional astronomy (1 pc = 206,265 AU)

12. What is beyond 100 AU?

The edge of the Solar System and the beginning of interstellar space.

50-100 AU: Kuiper Belt

  • Icy objects, dwarf planets (Pluto at 39.5 AU)
  • Short-period comets originate here

90 AU: Termination Shock

  • Solar wind slows below sound speed

120 AU: Heliopause

  • Boundary where solar wind meets interstellar medium
  • Voyager 1 crossed in 2012 (121 AU)

2,000-100,000 AU: Oort Cloud

  • Spherical shell of icy comets
  • Gravitationally bound to the Sun
  • Long-period comets originate here

125,000 AU (~2 light-years): Sun's gravitational dominance ends

  • Beyond this, nearby stars' gravity is comparable
  • Practical edge of the Solar System

Perspective: Even at 100 AU, you're still deep within the Sun's influence. Interstellar space (between stars) begins around 100,000 AU.

Conversion Table: Hectometer to Astronomical Unit

Hectometer (hm)Astronomical Unit (AU)
0.50
10
1.50
20
50
100
250
500
1000
2500
5000
1,0000

People Also Ask

How do I convert Hectometer to Astronomical Unit?

To convert Hectometer to Astronomical Unit, enter the value in Hectometer 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 Hectometer to Astronomical Unit?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Hectometer and Astronomical Unit. 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 Astronomical Unit back to Hectometer?

Yes! You can easily convert Astronomical Unit back to Hectometer by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Astronomical Unit to Hectometer converter page. You can also explore other length conversions on our category page.

Learn more →

What are common uses for Hectometer and Astronomical Unit?

Hectometer and Astronomical Unit 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.

All Length Conversions

Meter to KilometerMeter to HectometerMeter to DecimeterMeter to CentimeterMeter to MillimeterMeter to InchMeter to FootMeter to YardMeter to MileMeter to Nautical MileMeter to MicrometerMeter to NanometerMeter to Light YearMeter to Astronomical UnitMeter to ParsecMeter to AngstromMeter to Point (Typography)Meter to Mil/ThouMeter to FathomMeter to FurlongMeter to Link (Gunter's)Meter to PaceMeter to SpanMeter to DigitMeter to Cable LengthMeter to EllMeter to FingerMeter to Roman MileMeter to StadionMeter to Chi (Chinese)Meter to Shaku (Japanese)Meter to Li (Chinese)Meter to ToiseMeter to BoltMeter to RopeMeter to SmootMeter to SajeneMeter to KenMeter to WaMeter to VaraMeter to AlnMeter to Cubit (Royal/Egyptian)Meter to VerstaMeter to ArpentMeter to Ri (Japanese)Meter to KlafterMeter to YojanaMeter to SkeinKilometer to MeterKilometer to HectometerKilometer to DecimeterKilometer to CentimeterKilometer to MillimeterKilometer to InchKilometer to FootKilometer to YardKilometer to MileKilometer to Nautical MileKilometer to MicrometerKilometer to NanometerKilometer to Light YearKilometer to Astronomical UnitKilometer to ParsecKilometer to AngstromKilometer to Point (Typography)Kilometer to Mil/ThouKilometer to FathomKilometer to FurlongKilometer to Link (Gunter's)Kilometer to PaceKilometer to SpanKilometer to DigitKilometer to Cable LengthKilometer to EllKilometer to FingerKilometer to Roman MileKilometer to StadionKilometer to Chi (Chinese)Kilometer to Shaku (Japanese)Kilometer to Li (Chinese)Kilometer to ToiseKilometer to BoltKilometer to RopeKilometer to SmootKilometer to SajeneKilometer to KenKilometer to WaKilometer to VaraKilometer to AlnKilometer to Cubit (Royal/Egyptian)Kilometer to VerstaKilometer to ArpentKilometer to Ri (Japanese)Kilometer to KlafterKilometer to YojanaKilometer to SkeinHectometer to MeterHectometer to KilometerHectometer to DecimeterHectometer to CentimeterHectometer to MillimeterHectometer to InchHectometer to FootHectometer to YardHectometer to MileHectometer to Nautical MileHectometer to MicrometerHectometer to NanometerHectometer to Light YearHectometer to ParsecHectometer to AngstromHectometer to Point (Typography)Hectometer to Mil/ThouHectometer to FathomHectometer to FurlongHectometer to Link (Gunter's)Hectometer to PaceHectometer to SpanHectometer to DigitHectometer to Cable Length

Verified Against Authority Standards

All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.

NIST Guide for the Use of SI

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyOfficial US standards for length measurements

SI Brochure

Bureau International des Poids et MesuresInternational System of Units official documentation

Last verified: December 3, 2025