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Encyclopedia > Gigametre


A gigametre (American spelling: gigameter) (symbol: Gm) is a unit of length equal to 109 metres. Its customary equivalent is 621,371 miles.


Gigametres are almost never seen in practical use, because they are too big for any terrestrial application, and astronomers have been long accustomed to use millions of kilometers and astronomical units (AU) instead.

  • 1 AU is equal to 149.6 Gm
  • diameter of the Sun is 1.4 Gm
  • mean radius of Mercury's orbit is 57.9 Gm
  • mean radius of Jupiter's orbit is 778.4 Gm
  • mean radius of Ganymede's orbit (around Jupiter) is 1.07 Gm
  • light travels the distance of 1 Gm in approximately 3.34 s

See also: 1 E9 m, SI, metre, SI prefix, Orders of magnitude, light year, parsec


megametre << gigametre << terametre


  Results from FactBites:
 
Solar System Pictures (925 words)
One AU is the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun, or 149 598 000 kilometres.
Other units in common use include the gigametre (Gm, one million kilometres) and the terametre (Tm, one billion/milliard kilometres).
Pluto is roughly 38 AU (5.9 Tm) from the Sun, while Jupiter lies at roughly 5.2 AU (778 Gm).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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