How many exasmoot in 1 light-minute? The answer is 1.0569718815372E-8. We assume you are converting between exasmoot and light minute. You can view more details on each measurement unit: exasmoot or light-minute The SI base unit for length is the metre. 1 metre is equal to 5.8761311552474E-19 exasmoot, or 5.5594015866359E-11 light-minute. Note that rounding errors may occur, so always check the results. Use this page to learn how to convert between exasmoots and light minutes. Type in your own numbers in the form to convert the units!
1 exasmoot to light-minute = 94609896.20137 light-minute
2 exasmoot to light-minute = 189219792.40274 light-minute
3 exasmoot to light-minute = 283829688.60411 light-minute
4 exasmoot to light-minute = 378439584.80548 light-minute
5 exasmoot to light-minute = 473049481.00685 light-minute
6 exasmoot to light-minute = 567659377.20822 light-minute
7 exasmoot to light-minute = 662269273.40958 light-minute
8 exasmoot to light-minute = 756879169.61095 light-minute
9 exasmoot to light-minute = 851489065.81232 light-minute
10 exasmoot to light-minute = 946098962.01369 light-minute
You can do the reverse unit conversion from light-minute to exasmoot, or enter any two units below:
The SI prefix "exa" represents a factor of 1018, or in exponential notation, 1E18.
So 1 exasmoot = 1018 smoots.
The definition of a smoot is as follows:
A smoot is a unit of distance (or "length", as physical scientists say) used for measuring the Harvard Bridge. It is named after an MIT fraternity pledge at Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Oliver R. Smoot (class of 1962). In October of 1958, fellow students helped Mr. Smoot measure the length of the bridge by placing him end to end and marking the increments. Oliver was a top student at MIT and went on to run NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The smoot is equal to his height (five feet and seven inches -- 1.70 m), and the bridge's length was measured to be "364.4 smoots plus one ear".
A light-minute (also written light minute) is a unit of length. It is defined as the distance light travels in an absolute vacuum in one minute or 17,987,547,480 metres (~18 Gm). Note that this value is exact, since the metre is actually defined in terms of the light-second.
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