Convert Nautical Mile to Light Year (nmi → ly)
The nautical mile is the international navigation unit for marine and aviation, equal to one minute of latitude.
Nautical Mile to Light Year Conversion Table
10 common values| Nautical Mile | Light Year |
|---|---|
| 1 nmi | 1.958 × 10^-13 ly |
| 5 nmi | 9.788 × 10^-13 ly |
| 10 nmi | 1.958 × 10^-12 ly |
| 25 nmi | 4.894 × 10^-12 ly |
| 50 nmi | 9.788 × 10^-12 ly |
| 100 nmi | 1.958 × 10^-11 ly |
| 250 nmi | 4.894 × 10^-11 ly |
| 500 nmi | 9.788 × 10^-11 ly |
| 1,000 nmi | 1.958 × 10^-10 ly |
| 5,000 nmi | 9.788 × 10^-10 ly |
How to Convert Nautical Mile to Light Year Manually
Step by StepConverting nautical miles to light years is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in nautical milesStart with the number of nautical miles (nmi) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 1.958 × 10^-13The conversion factor from nmi to ly is 1.958 × 10^-13. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in light yearsThe result is your value in light years (ly).
Formula
Multiply the value in nautical miles by 1.958 × 10^-13. For the reverse direction, multiply by 5,108,369,300,000.
ly = nmi × 1.958 × 10^-13nmi = ly × 5,108,369,300,000Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 nautical mile = 1.852 km = 1.151 statute miles.
- A knot (1 nmi/h) equals 1.852 km/h — remember this for weather and sailing reports.
- Latitude is measured in degrees and minutes; one minute of latitude equals exactly one nautical mile.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing nautical miles with statute miles — the 15% difference matters in flight planning.
- Reading knots as km/h on weather reports — a 40-knot wind is 74 km/h, not 40.
- Using nautical miles on land — outside navigation contexts, use kilometres or statute miles.
About Nautical Mile and Light Year
What is the Nautical Mile?
The nautical mile equals exactly 1,852 meters and is the international standard distance unit for marine navigation, aviation, and polar geography. It was originally defined as one minute of arc along a meridian — meaning 60 nautical miles equal one degree of latitude. This relationship makes the nautical mile uniquely useful for charts: a navigator can read distance directly off the latitude scale of any map. Adopted internationally in 1929, the nautical mile is used by virtually all maritime nations and in international aviation regulations. The related speed unit is the knot (1 nautical mile per hour). The nautical mile is roughly 1.151 statute miles or 1.852 km. Distinct from the older British nautical mile (6,080 ft) and the US nautical mile (6,080.20 ft), the international nautical mile is now standard worldwide.
- Marine navigation and nautical charts
- Commercial and military aviation distances
- International maritime law (territorial waters = 12 nmi)
Territorial waters extend 12 nautical miles from the coastline. London Heathrow to New York JFK is about 3000 nmi.
What is the Light Year?
The light-year equals approximately 9,460,730,472,580,800 meters (about 9.461 trillion km) and is the standard astronomical unit for stellar distances. Despite its name, a light-year is a unit of distance, not time — it represents how far light travels in vacuum during one Julian year (365.25 days) at the speed of light (299,792,458 m/s). The nearest star to our Sun, Proxima Centauri, is 4.24 light-years away. The Milky Way galaxy is about 100,000 light-years across, and the observable universe extends roughly 93 billion light-years in diameter. Astronomers more often use the parsec (3.26 light-years) for technical work, but the light-year remains popular in education and science communication because it intuitively conveys both distance and the time light needs to travel that far — which is why we see distant galaxies as they were millions of years ago.
- Interstellar and galactic distances in astronomy
- Popular-science descriptions of the observable universe
- Exoplanet distance reporting in the media
Proxima Centauri, the nearest star beyond the Sun, is 4.24 ly away. The Milky Way is about 100,000 ly across.