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About these units
Foot (ft)
A foot, equal to 12 inches, has been used for thousands of years and likely originated from the length of a human foot. Though early definitions varied, the modern standard foot—established internationally in 1959—provides a stable and consistent reference. The foot remains the foundation of architectural and construction measurements in the United States, influencing everything from lumber dimensions to ceiling heights and room layouts. Because the foot is intuitively relatable to human scale, people often estimate heights, furniture sizes, and walking distances in feet. In aviation, altitude is universally measured in feet worldwide, even in countries that otherwise use metric units—an unusual but deeply embedded global convention. The foot's persistence shows how cultural inertia can remain strong even when a unit predates modern scientific measurement.
Light Year (ly)
A light year is the distance that light travels in a vacuum in one Julian year, equal to approximately 9.4607 × 10¹⁵ meters. Despite its name, it is a unit of distance, not time. The light year arose from the need to express vast astronomical separations using a concept familiar to laypeople: the finite speed of light. By linking distance to time, it becomes easier to comprehend that observing distant stars is also an act of looking back in time. The light year is especially useful when describing the locations of nearby stars, nebulae, and star-forming regions. For example, Proxima Centauri lies roughly 4.24 light years away. Because light moves at about 300,000 km/s, even the nearest galactic objects are many trillions of kilometers distant, making ordinary units impractical. One of the light year's greatest strengths is how vividly it illustrates the immensity of space. When astronomers say a galaxy is millions of light years away, they convey not only a vast spatial separation but also the staggering temporal depth of the universe. The light year therefore plays a dual role as both a scientific measurement and an educational tool that grounds cosmic distances in a memorable framework.