📘Q.12 IAS Prelims 2021 — GS | Science & Technology|
Why Astronomical Distances Are Measured in Light-Years?
Authentic Classroom Explanation by IAS Monk
📌 Question
🌠 Q12. Why Astronomical Distances Are Measured in Light-Years
📌 Question
Which one of the following is a reason why astronomical distances are measured in light-years?
(a) Distances among stellar bodies do not change.
(b) Gravity of stellar bodies does not change.
(c) Light always travels in straight line.
(d) Speed of light is always same.
✅ Correct Answer: (d) Speed of light is always same
🧑🏫 Authentic Classroom Explanation by IAS Monk
From first principles to final option — the UPSC way.
🔬 Concept First
When distances become unimaginably large, ordinary units fail. Astronomy therefore uses a unit based on the most universal constant available.
👉 That constant is the speed of light.
🔍 Option-wise Elimination
- Option (a): Distances do not change ❌
- The universe is expanding; distances change continuously
- Option (b): Gravity does not change ❌
- Gravity varies with mass and distance
- Option (c): Light always travels in straight line ❌
- Light bends in gravitational fields (gravitational lensing)
- Option (d): Speed of light is always same ✅
- Speed of light in vacuum is constant (~3 × 10⁸ m/s)
- Same everywhere in the universe
- Independent of observer (Einstein’s relativity)
🌌 What Is a Light-Year?
- Distance travelled by light in one Earth year
- ≈ 9.46 trillion kilometres
- A unit of distance, not time
🔍 Curiosity Raiser
Did you know?
When astronomers say a galaxy is 1 billion light-years away, they are actually seeing it as it existed 1 billion years ago.
🧠 Enrichment Notes (UPSC Lens)
- Why not kilometres?
- Numbers become astronomically large and meaningless
- Other cosmic distance units:
- Astronomical Unit (AU)
- Parsec (pc)
- Common UPSC Trap:
- Thinking light-year is a unit of time (❌)
- Exam Value:
- Tests understanding of constants, relativity, and scale of universe
🪶 IAS Monk Closing Whisper
In the universe, distance is measured not by steps, but by light itself.
