Convert megalight year to exasmoot


megalight-year
exasmoot


More information from the unit converter

How many megalight-year in 1 exasmoot? The answer is 0.00018000360768906. We assume you are converting between megalight year and exasmoot. You can view more details on each measurement unit: megalight-year or exasmoot The SI base unit for length is the metre. 1 metre is equal to 1.0577248071986E-22 megalight-year, or 5.8761311552474E-19 exasmoot. Note that rounding errors may occur, so always check the results. Use this page to learn how to convert between megalight years and exasmoots. Type in your own numbers in the form to convert the units!



Quick conversion chart of megalight-year to exasmoot

1 megalight-year to exasmoot = 5555.44421 exasmoot

2 megalight-year to exasmoot = 11110.88842 exasmoot

3 megalight-year to exasmoot = 16666.33263 exasmoot

4 megalight-year to exasmoot = 22221.77684 exasmoot

5 megalight-year to exasmoot = 27777.22105 exasmoot

6 megalight-year to exasmoot = 33332.66526 exasmoot

7 megalight-year to exasmoot = 38888.10947 exasmoot

8 megalight-year to exasmoot = 44443.55367 exasmoot

9 megalight-year to exasmoot = 49998.99788 exasmoot

10 megalight-year to exasmoot = 55554.44209 exasmoot


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Common length conversions


Definition: Megalight-year

One megalight-year, abbreviated "Mly", is one million light-years, or 306,601 parsecs. Megalight-years are typically used to measure distances between neighboring galaxies and galaxy clusters.


Definition: Exasmoot

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".


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