Para 4.1 of the SI handbook states "The CIPM (1969), recognizing that users
would wish to employ the SI with units which are not part of it .

 

Although the light-year is not in the list, it meets the criteria for being
included (along with minutes hours, days etc) namely that it is universally
understood and used by the relevant practitioners in all countries.  As
such, I don't think it worth losing too much sleep over astronomers
world-wide using light-years - there are far more important things to get on
with. 

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of John M. Steele
Sent: 03 April 2011 15:40
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:50264] re: astronomical measurements

 

No.  I find comparing in meters (with a suitable prefix) gives me a better
sense of scale than mixing AU, light years, parsecs, and other obscure units
with obscure inter-relationships.  Determining that a light year is some
63000 AU is not particularly helpful.

 

As a general comparison, it is much easier to learn a few metric prefixes,
usable with all units, to provide a short hand alternative to scientific
notation for scale than to learn all the absurd interrelationships of
Customary units.

 

  _____  

From: Paul Rittman <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, April 3, 2011 10:24:24 AM
Subject: [USMA:50263] re: astronomical measurements

Knowing that the radius of earth's orbit is about 150 Gm, the scale between
solar and 
interstellar distances is clearer to me than the mix of measurement units
now used.
 
John, when you say that, do you mean that you prefer to use the term au, or
that you 
simply tell them that the au is 150 Gm, and then go on to use the metric
numbers/terms? 
I do agree, that using the au does seem to provide a bit of scale, that even
the term 
"light-year" doesn't have. "Light-year" is very good for giving one a
definition that 
you don't easily forget, but isn't good for much
 else, in that it is (almost) impossible 
to visualize the amount of space that is actually traversed in a year by
anything, to 
say nothing of a ray of light. Au at least allows you to compare the stellar
distance 
to our own solar system.

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