The Scale of the Universe
The Scale of the Universe | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Cary Huang, Michael Huang (HTwins) |
Composer(s) | Kevin MacLeod, Cliff Martinez |
Engine | Adobe Flash |
Platform(s) | Web-based |
Release | 2010 |
Genre(s) | Edutainment |
The Scale of the Universe is an interactive online visualization tool and website first created in 2010 by Michael and Cary Huang (also known as HTwins), two twin brothers from Moraga, California.[1][2][3][4][5] Released on Newgrounds and the Huang brothers' web page, it features a scrollbar that players can use to navigate through orders of magnitude and view various objects within such size ranges. Sliding the scrollbar to the left and right causes the screen to zoom in and out respectively, utilizing resolution independence in the process.[1]
In 2012, Cary and Michael Huang released a sequel titled The Scale of the Universe 2, in which clicking on objects brings up infoboxes that display information about them.[6][7][8]
The Scale of the Universe was featured on NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day on 7 October 2018.[9]
In 2020, animation studio Kurzgesagt released the app Universe in a Nutshell, which took inspiration from The Scale of the Universe.[10][11]
The main-belt asteroid 10003 Caryhuang was officially named by the International Astronomical Union on 16 June 2021, partly in recognition of Cary Huang's involvement in The Scale of the Universe.[2]
Objects measured
[edit]Less than 1 meter
[edit]Item | Measurement given in The Scale of the Universe | Measurement given in The Scale of the Universe 2 | Description giving in "The Scale of the Universe 2"
(Work in Progress) |
---|---|---|---|
Quantum foam | Not given | 0.0000000000093 yoctometers
9.3 × 10-36 meters |
According to the spacetime theory, quantum foam, which is also known as spacetime foam, is the foundation of the universe. It is impossible to directly observe or measure this because it is so small. |
String (physics) | Not given | 0.0000000000093 yoctometers
9.3 × 10-36 meters |
According to the string theory, strings are one-dimensional- al, but vibrates in all the other dimensions. This string, however, is not the same string that is used for flying kites. That string is between 10^32 and 10^33 times larger. |
Planck length | 10-35 meters | 0.000000000016
1.6 × 10-35 meters |
The plank length (lp) is a unit of length. There is also a plank time, which is the amount of time it takes light to travel one plank length in a vacuum. (Super short!) |
Yoctometer | 10-24 meters | 10-24 meters | |
Neutrino | 10-24 meters | 1 yoctometer
10-24 meters |
Neutrinos passes though ordinary matter like you and me all the time! In fact, they're doing it right now! Neutrinos have no charge, so they are only affected my gravity and the weak force. However, they are so small that they are barely affected |
Top quark | — | 100 yoctometers
10-22 meters |
The top quark is the smallest quark, which means it is the most massive. It is almost 100,000 times as massive as the up quark, which is the lightest of the quark. The top quark's mass is 173 billion electronvolts-! |
Zeptometer | 10-21 meters | 10-21 meters | |
Preon | 10-21 meters | — | |
High-energy radius of a neutrino (SOTU) High-Energy Neutrino (SOTU 2) |
10-21 meters | 15 zeptometers
1.5 × 10-20 meters |
Neutrinos of higher energy are larger. For more about neutrinos, go to neutrinos which shows the average size. It's a whopping 15,000 times stronger. |
Bottom quark | — | 30 zeptometers
3 × 10-20 meters |
The bottom quark is called the beauty quark because it is so flawlessly beautiful. It is third generation and quickly decays into first generation quarks, like up and down. |
Charm quark | — | 100 zeptometers
10-19 meters |
The charm quark and the strange quark are the second generation of matter. The charm quark is quite charming. |
Strange quark | — | 400 zeptometers
4 × 10-19 meters |
Strange quarks are very strange. They are 50 times as massive as up quarks, but they are still smaller! Isn't that strange? Very much so! "Strange matter" is made of up, down, and strange quarks! |
Attometer | 10-18 meters | 10-18 meters | |
Up quark | Not given | 1 attometer
10-18 meters |
There are six flavors of quarks. They are up, down, strange, top, and bottom. The smaller a quark is, the more mass it has. As a result, the up and down quarks. This up quarks has a charge of +2/3. |
Down quark | Not given | 1 attometer
10-18 meters |
There are six flavors of quarks. They are up, down, strange, top, and bottom. The smaller a quark is, the more mass it has. As a result, the up and down quarks. This up quarks has a charge of +2/3. |
Quark | 10-18 meters | — | |
Electron core | 10-18 meters | — | |
Range of the weak force | — | 10 attometers
10-17 meters |
The weak force is one of the four fundamental forces of nature, and is the weaker of the two nuclear forces. As distance increases, its strength decreases. At just 10 attometers, the weak force is so weak it is unmeasurable. |
Lengths shorter than this are not confirmed | — | 100 attometers
10-16 meters |
All the objects shorter than this are unmeasured. The sizes they appear are only estimates. Some things. |
Femtometer | 10-15 meters | 10-15 meters | |
Proton | 10-15 meters | 1 femtometer
10-15 meters |
Protons are found within an atom's nucleus. They are thousands of times smaller than the atoms itself. they only have two up quarks and one down one. Therefore, the proton's charge is +2/3+2/3-1/3=+1. |
Neutron | 10-15 meters | 1 femtometer
10-15 meters |
Neutrons are found within an atom's nucleus. They are thousands of times smaller then the atom itself. They have two down quarks and one up quark. Therefore, the proton's charge is -1/3-1/3+2/3=0. |
Helium nucleus | — | 3 femtometers
3 × 10-15 meters |
The helium nucleus is thousands of times smaller then the atom, like a marble in a football field. The only reason matter feels solid is because atoms repel. If atoms didn't repel, everything would fall though each other! |
Electron (classical) | — | 5.64 femtometers
5.64 × 10-15 meters |
Electrons are so small that their size can't accurately be measured. The size of a electron varies greatly depending on how it is measured, whether it is based on the quantum model, or in this case, the classical model. |
Chlorine nucleus | — | 6 femtometers
6 × 10-15 meters |
A chlorine nucleus has 17 protons and anywhere from 11 to 34 neutrons. However, the majority of the isotopes will decay within minutes, if not seconds! The only stable isotopes are chlorine-35 (18 neutrons) and chlorine-37 (20 neutrons). Even numbers of neutrons (especially magic numbers 2, 8, 20, 50, 82, and 126) tend to be more stable than odd ones. |
Average size of an atom's nucleus | 10-14 meters | — | |
Uranium nucleus | — | 15 femtometers
1.5 × 10-14 meters |
Uranium is the highest natural element. It also has the largest nucleus of all the natural elements. Uranium-238, the common isotope of uranium, has a half life of 4.5 billion years, approximately the time the Earth has existed. |
Picometer | 10-12 meters | 10-12 meters | |
Gamma ray wavelength | 10-12 meters | 1 picometer
10-12 meters |
Gamma rays have a very high frequency. They can come from radioactive decay, Oh, and by the way, it's not actually light blue as it appears to on the left (picture) |
Electron compton wavelength | 2 × 10-12 meters | — | |
Helium atom | 3.1 × 10-11 meters | 2.5 × 10-11 meters | |
Hydrogen atom | 2.5 × 10-11 meters | 3.1 × 10-11 meters | |
Smallest thing visible to an electron microscope | — | 5 × 10-11 meters | |
Angstrom | 10-10 meters | 10-10 meters | |
Sulfur atom | 10-10 meters | — | |
Carbon atom | 7 × 10-11 meters | 1.6 × 10-10 meters | |
Water molecule | 2.8 × 10-10 meters | 2.8 × 10-10 meters | |
X-ray wavelength | 5 × 10-12 meters | 5 × 10-10 meters | |
Caesium atom | 2.6 × 10-10 meters | 5 × 10-10 meters | |
Width of a protein alpha helix | 5 × 10-10 meters | 8 × 10-10 meters | |
Glucose molecule | — | 8 × 10-10 meters | |
Nanometer | 10-9 meters | 10-9 meters | |
Width of a carbon nanotube | 10-9 meters | 10-9 meters | |
Buckyball | — | 10-9 meters | |
Smallest transistor gate of a microprocessor | 2 × 10-9 meters | — | |
Phospholipid | — | 2.5 × 10-9 meters | |
Thickness of DNA | 3 × 10-9 meters | 3 × 10-9 meters | |
Phospholipid bilayer | — | 5 × 10-9 meters | |
Width of the cell membrane | 10-8 meters | — | |
Porcine circovirus | — | 1.7 × 10-8 meters | |
Transistor gate | — | 2.5 × 10-8 meters | |
Hepatitis B virus | — | 4.2 × 10-8 meters | |
Ultraviolet light wavelength | 5 × 10-8 meters | 6 × 10-8 meters | |
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) | 9 × 10-8 meters | 9 × 10-8 meters | |
Depth of a pit in a CD | 1.2 × 10-7 meters | — | |
Smallest thing visible to an optical microscope | — | 2 × 10-7 meters | |
Bacteriophage | — | 2 × 10-7 meters | |
Violet light wavelength | 3 × 10-7 meters | 4 × 10-7 meters | |
Mimivirus | — | 4 × 10-7 meters | |
Largest virus | 5 × 10-7 meters | 4.4 × 10-7 meters | |
Violet light wavelength | 7 × 10-7 meters | 7.5 × 10-7 meters | |
Micrometer | 10-6 meters | 10-6 meters | |
Smallest-sized particle surgical masks block out | 10-6 meters | — | |
Y chromosome | — | 1.5 × 10-6 meters | |
E. coli | 10-6 meters | 2 × 10-6 meters | |
Clay particle | 10-6 meters | 2 × 10-6 meters | |
X chromosome | — | 4 × 10-6 meters | |
Mitochondrion | — | 4 × 10-6 meters | |
Red blood cell | 7 × 10-6 meters | 7 × 10-6 meters | |
Cell nucleus | — | 7 × 10-6 meters | |
Chloroplast | — | 8 × 10-6 meters | |
White blood cell | 10-5 meters | 10-5 meters | |
Width of acrylic fiber | 1.2 × 10-5 meters | — | |
Infrared light wavelength | 10-5 meters | 1.5 × 10-5 meters | |
Width of silk fiber | — | 1.5 × 10-5 meters | |
Twip | — | 1.76 × 10-5 meters | |
Mist/fog droplet (SOTU) Mist droplet (SOTU 2) |
10-5 meters | 2 × 10-5 meters | |
Mil, point or thou (SOTU) Thou (SOTU 2) |
2.5 × 10-5 meters | 2.54 × 10-5 meters | |
Skin cell | — | 3.5 × 10-5 meters | |
Pollen grain | 5 × 10-5 meters | — | |
Silt particle | 5 × 10-5 meters | 5 × 10-5 meters | |
Smallest thing/object visible to the naked eye | 10-4 meters | 10-4 meters | |
Width of human hair | 10-4 meters | 10-4 meters | |
Human egg | 2.5 × 10-4 meters | 1.2 × 10-4 meters | |
Thickness of paper | 10-4 meters | 1.5 × 10-4 meters | |
Ciliate protist | 2 × 10-4 meters | — | |
Paramecium | — | 2 × 10-4 meters | |
Dust mite | — | 3 × 10-4 meters | |
Computer pixel (SOTU) LCD pixel (SOTU 2) |
3 × 10-4 meters | 3 × 10-4 meters | |
Amoeba | — | 3.5 × 10-4 meters | |
Grain of salt | 5 × 10-4 meters | 5 × 10-4 meters | |
Grain of sand | 10-3 meters | 5 × 10-4 meters | |
Thickness of human skin (thinnest, eyelids) | 5 × 10-4 meters | — | |
Thickness of a credit card | 7 × 10-4 meters | — | |
Mechanical pencil lead (SOTU) Pencil lead (SOTU 2) |
7 × 10-4 meters | (7 ± 2) × 10-4 meters | |
Largest bacteria | 5 × 10-4 meters | 7.5 × 10-4 meters | |
Millimeter | 10-3 meters | 10-3 meters | |
Hummingbird egg | 1.2 × 10-3 meters | — | |
Glass marble | — | 1.5 × 10-3 meters | |
Duckweed | — | 2 × 10-3 meters | |
Sesame seed | 3 × 10-3 meters | — | |
Microchip | 4 × 10-3 meters | — | |
Thickness of human skin (thickest, soles of feet) | 4 × 10-3 meters | — | |
Ant | 4 × 10-3 meters | 4 × 10-3 meters | |
Sleet | 5 × 10-3 meters | 5 × 10-3 meters | |
Sunflower seed | — | 7 × 10-3 meters | |
Grain of rice | 8 × 10-3 meters | 5 × 10-3 meters | |
Average size of a snowflake | 10-2 meters | — | |
Coffee bean | 10-2 meters | 10-2 meters | |
Microwave wavelength | 10-2 meters | 10-2 meters | |
U.S. penny | — | 1.9 × 10-2 meters | |
Square inch | 2.54 × 10-2 meters | 2.5 × 10-2 meters | |
Quail egg | 3 × 10-2 meters | 3 × 10-2 meters | |
Common earthworm | 4 × 10-2 meters | 4 × 10-2 meters | |
Matchstick | — | 5 × 10-2 meters | |
Rubik's cube | 5.5 × 10-2 meters | — | |
Chicken egg | 5.5 × 10-2 meters | 5.5 × 10-2 meters | |
Hummingbird | 10-1 meters | — | |
Shrew | 10-1 meters | — | |
Cup | 1.2 × 10-1 meters | — | |
Ostrich egg | 1.5 × 10-1 meters | — | |
Approximate size of this viewport | — | 2 × 10-1 meters | |
Largest hailstone | — | 2 × 10-1 meters | |
Basketball | — | 2.4 × 10-1 meters | |
Russell's teapot | — | 2.5 × 10-1 meters | |
Inch ruler | 3.1 × 10-1 meters | 3 × 10-1 meters | |
Largest snowflake found | 3.8 × 10-1 meters | — | |
Beach ball | 5 × 10-1 meters (small) 1 meter (large) |
8 × 10-1 meters |
1 meter to 1 terameter
[edit]Item | Measurement given in The Scale of the Universe | Measurement given in The Scale of the Universe 2 |
---|---|---|
Meter | 100 meters | 100 meters |
Meterstick | 1 meter | — |
Dodo bird | — | 1 meter |
Rafflesia | — | 1 meter |
FM radio wavelength | 1 meter | 1 meter |
Human | 1.7 meters | 1.7 meters |
Wandering albatross | — | 2.3 meters |
Floor to ceiling | 2.5 meters | — |
Sunflower | — | 2.5 meters |
Japanese spider crab | — | 3 meters |
Giant earthworm | 7 meters | 3 meters |
Bubble car | 4 meters | — |
Elephant | — | 5 meters |
Giraffe | — | 6 meters |
Tyrannosaurus rex | — | 7 meters |
Green anaconda | 8 meters | — |
Apollo lunar module | — | 9 meters |
Bus | 1.2 × 101 meters | — |
Saguaro cactus | 2 × 101 meters | 1.4 × 101 meters |
Average U.S. house | — | 1.5 × 101 meters |
Oak tree | 2 × 101 meters | 1.5 × 101 meters |
Blue whale | — | 3 × 101 meters |
Amphilicoelias fragilimus | — | 3 × 101 meters |
Boeing 747 | 7 × 101 meters | 6.5 × 101 meters |
Redwood tree | 1.1 × 102 meters | 102 meters |
International Space Station | — | 1.08 × 102 meters |
Football field | — | 1.097 × 102 meters |
Saturn V | — | 1.1 × 102 meters |
Great Pyramid of Giza | — | 1.5 × 102 meters |
Gateway Arch | — | 1.92 × 102 meters |
Hoover Dam | — | 2.2 × 102 meters |
Titanic | — | 2.7 × 102 meters |
Eiffel Tower | 3.2 × 102 meters | 3.2 × 102 meters |
Half Dome | 4.2 × 102 meters | 4.1 × 102 meters |
Sears Tower | 4.42 × 102 meters | — |
International Commerce Centre | 4.84 × 102 meters | — |
Vatican City | — | 8 × 102 meters |
Burj Khalifa | — | 8.28 × 102 meters |
Angel Falls | 9.79 × 102 meters | 9.8 × 102 meters |
AM radio wavelength | 102 meters | 103 meters |
Kilometer | 103 meters | 103 meters |
Boeing Everett Factory | — | 103 meters |
Mile | 1.609 × 103 meters | — |
Stanford Linear Collider | 3 × 103 meters | — |
Uluru | — | 3 × 103 meters |
Central Park | — | 4 × 103 meters |
Cruithne | — | 5 × 103 meters |
Large Hadron Collider | — | 8 × 103 meters |
Palm Jebel Ali | — | 8 × 103 meters |
Mount Everest | 8 × 103 meters | 8 × 103 meters |
Large Electron-Positron Collider | 104 meters | — |
Depth of the Mariana Trench | 1.1 × 104 meters | 104 meters |
Halley's Comet | — | 1.1 × 104 meters |
Deimos | 1.3 × 104 meters | 1.3 × 104 meters |
Phobos | 2.3 × 104 meters | 2.3 × 104 meters |
Neutron star | — | 2.4 × 104 meters |
Ganymed | 3.2 × 104 meters | — |
Marathon | 4.2 × 104 meters | 4.2 × 104 meters |
Bianca | 5.4 × 104 meters | — |
Rhode Island | — | 7.5 × 104 meters |
Belinda | 8 × 104 meters | — |
Nix | — | 8 × 104 meters |
Hydra | — | 105 meters |
Brunei | — | 1.2 × 105 meters |
Dysnomia | — | 1.5 × 105 meters |
Galatea | 1.6 × 105 meters | — |
Rwanda | — | 2.4 × 105 meters |
Nereid | 3.4 × 105 meters | — |
West Virginia | — | 4 × 105 meters |
Grand Canyon | — | 4.5 × 105 meters |
Miranda | 4.7 × 105 meters | — |
Ceres | 9.5 × 105 meters | 9.5 × 105 meters |
Megameter | 106 meters | 106 meters |
Italy | — | 1.1 × 106 meters |
California | — | 1.2 × 106 meters |
Charon | 1.2 × 106 meters | 1.2 × 106 meters |
Texas | — | 1.2 × 106 meters |
Quaoar | 1.3 × 106 meters | 1.3 × 106 meters |
Titania | 1.5 × 106 meters | — |
Sedna | 1.7 × 106 meters | 1.8 × 106 meters |
Pluto | 2.3 × 106 meters | 2.3 × 106 meters |
Eris | 2.7 × 106 meters | 2.4 × 106 meters |
Great Barrier Reef | — | 2.6 × 106 meters |
Triton | 2.7 × 106 meters | 2.7 × 106 meters |
Europa | — | 3.1 × 106 meters |
Moon | 3.5 × 106 meters | 3.5 × 106 meters |
Io | — | 3.6 × 106 meters |
Width of the United States | 4.2 × 106 meters | 4.2 × 106 meters |
Callisto | — | 4.8 × 106 meters |
Mercury | 4.7 × 106 meters | 4.9 × 106 meters |
Titan | — | 5.2 × 106 meters |
Ganymede | 5.3 × 106 meters | 5.3 × 106 meters |
Mars | 6.8 × 106 meters | 6.8 × 106 meters |
Asia | — | 8 × 106 meters |
Great Wall of China | — | 8.8 × 106 meters |
Venus | 1.2 × 107 meters | 1.2 × 107 meters |
Earth | 1.27 × 107 meters | 1.27 × 107 meters |
Sirius B | 2 × 107 meters | 2 × 107 meters |
Neptune | 4.9 × 107 meters | 4.9 × 107 meters |
Uranus | 5.1 × 107 meters | 5.1 × 107 meters |
Minecraft world | — | 6.4 × 107 meters |
Gliese 229 B | 1.1 × 108 meters | 1.1 × 108 meters |
Saturn | 1.2 × 108 meters | 1.2 × 108 meters |
Jupiter | 1.4 × 108 meters | 1.4 × 108 meters |
Wolf 359 | 1.9 × 108 meters | 1.5 × 108 meters |
Proxima Centauri | 2.8 × 108 meters | 2 × 108 meters |
TrES-4 | 2.3 × 108 meters | 2.29999 × 108 meters |
Luyten's Star | 3.3 × 108 meters | 3.3 × 108 meters |
Kapteyn's Star | — | 4.2 × 108 meters |
Distance from Earth to the Moon | 4 × 108 meters | 3.8 × 108 meters |
Gliese 229A | — | 9.6 × 108 meters |
Gigameter | 109 meters | 109 meters |
Alpha Centauri B | 109 meters | 109 meters |
Sun | 1.4 × 109 meters | 1.4 × 109 meters |
Alpha Centauri A | 1.5 × 109 meters | 1.5 × 109 meters |
Sirius A | 2.5 × 109 meters | 2.5 × 109 meters |
Altair | — | 2.6 × 109 meters |
Procyon | — | 2.9 × 109 meters |
Vega | 3.8 × 109 meters | 3.8 × 109 meters |
Regulus | 5.8 × 109 meters | 5.8 × 109 meters |
Spica | 9.6 × 109 meters | 9.6 × 109 meters |
Total human height | — | 1010 meters |
Pollux | 1.1 × 1010 meters | 1.1 × 1010 meters |
Capella | — | 1.7 × 1010 meters |
VV Cephei B | 2 × 1010 meters | — |
Albireo | — | 2.2 × 1010 meters |
Arcturus | 3.6 × 1010 meters | 3.6 × 1010 meters |
Polaris | 4 × 1010 meters | 4 × 1010 meters |
Aldebaran | 6 × 1010 meters | 6 × 1010 meters |
Distance from Mercury to the Sun | 6 × 1010 meters | — |
Alnitak | 8.4 × 1010 meters | 8.4 × 1010 meters |
Rigel | 9.7 × 1010 meters | 9.7 × 1010 meters |
Distance from Earth to the Sun | 1.5 × 1011 meters | 1.5 × 1011 meters |
Gacrux | 1.6 × 1011 meters | 1.6 × 1011 meters |
Enif | — | 1.6 × 1011 meters |
Deneb | 3.1 × 1011 meters | 3.1 × 1011 meters |
La Superba | 4.2 × 1011 meters | 4.2 × 1011 meters |
Pistol Star | 4.7 × 1011 meters | 4.7 × 1011 meters |
R Doradus | — | 5.2 × 1011 meters |
S Doradus | 7.7 × 1011 meters | 7.7 × 1011 meters |
Distance from Jupiter to the Sun | 7.8 × 1011 meters | — |
Antares | 9.7 × 1011 meters | 9.69999999 × 1011 meters |
1 terameter and beyond
[edit]Item | Measurement given in The Scale of the Universe | Measurement given in The Scale of the Universe 2 |
---|---|---|
Terameter | 1012 meters | 1012 meters |
V382 Carinae | 1012 meters | — |
V838 Monocerotis | 1.1 × 1012 meters | — |
Betelgeuse | 1.4 × 1012 meters | 1.3 × 1012 meters |
Mu Cephei | 1.9 × 1012 meters | 1.9 × 1012 meters |
KY Cygni | 2 × 1012 meters | 2 × 1012 meters |
V354 Cephei | 2.1 × 1012 meters | 2.1 × 1012 meters |
VV Cephei A | 2.4 × 1012 meters | 2.4 × 1012 meters |
WOH G64 | 2.8 × 1012 meters | 2.8 × 1012 meters |
VY Canis Majoris | 3 × 1012 meters | 3 × 1012 meters |
Distance from Neptune to the Sun | — | 4.5 × 1012 meters |
Distance from Pluto to the Sun | 5.9 × 1012 meters | — |
Kuiper Belt | 1.5 × 1013 meters | 1.5 × 1013 meters |
Distance from Voyager 1 to Earth | — | 1.7 × 1013 meters |
Homunculus Nebula | 2 × 1013 meters | 2 × 1013 meters |
Light-day | — | 2.6 × 1013 meters |
Distance from Comet Hale-Bopp to Sun (farthest) | — | 5.5 × 1013 meters |
Distance from Sedna to Sun (farthest) | 1.4 × 1014 meters | — |
Stingray Nebula | 3 × 1014 meters | 8 × 1014 meters |
Petameter | 1015 meters | 1015 meters |
Distance from Proxima Centauri to Alpha Centauri A | 1.5 × 1015 meters | 1.5 × 1015 meters |
Gomez's Hamburger | — | 2.5 × 1015 meters |
Cat's Eye Nebula | 3.5 × 1015 meters | 2.5 × 1015 meters |
Hourglass Nebula | — | 3 × 1015 meters |
Blinking Nebula | — | 4.5 × 1015 meters |
Light year | 9.5 × 1015 meters | 1016 meters |
Rotten Egg Nebula | — | 1 light year 1.4 × 1016 meters |
Ring Nebula | 1.3 × 1016 meters | 2 light years 1.7 × 1016 meters |
Oort cloud | 1.5 × 1015 meters | 2 light years 2 × 1016 meters |
Horsehead Nebula | 2 × 1016 meters | 2 light years 2 × 1016 meters |
Ant Nebula | — | 2 light years 2 × 1016 meters |
Eskimo Nebula | — | 2 light years 2 × 1016 meters |
Boomerang Nebula | — | 2 light years 2.1 × 1016 meters |
Helix Nebula | 3 × 1016 meters | 3 light years 3 × 1016 meters |
Parsec | — | 3 light years 3.3 × 1016 meters |
Distance from the Sun to Proxima Centauri | 4 × 1016 meters | 4 light years 4.2 × 1016 meters |
Bubble Nebula | — | 7 light years 7 × 1016 meters |
Cone Nebula | — | 8 light years 8 × 1016 meters |
Pillars of Creation | 9.5 × 1016 meters | 10 light years 1017 meters |
Crab Nebula | 7 × 1016 meters | 11 light years 1.1 × 1017 meters |
The Spire | — | 20 light years 2 × 1017 meters |
Orion Nebula | 2 × 1017 meters | 24 light years 2.4 × 1017 meters |
Solar System's solar neighborhood | 4 × 1017 meters | — |
North America Nebula | — | 40 light years 4 × 1017 meters |
Messier 14 | 5 × 1017 meters | — |
Great Nebula in Carina | — | 60 light years 6 × 1017 meters |
Cave Nebula | — | 70 light years 7 × 1017 meters |
Eagle Nebula | — | 70 light years 7 × 1017 meters |
Rosette Nebula | 6.5 × 1017 meters | 100 light years 1018 meters |
Exameter | 1018 meters | 1018 meters |
Lagoon Nebula | — | 110 light years 1.1 × 1018 meters |
Omega Centauri | 1018 meters | 150 light years 1.5 × 1018 meters |
Messier 54 | 1.5 × 1018 meters | 300 light years 3 × 1018 meters |
Barnard's Loop | — | 300 light years 3 × 1018 meters |
Tarantula Nebula | 5 × 1018 meters | 600 light years 6 × 1018 meters |
Leo II | — | 2,000 light years 2 × 1019 meters |
Messier 87 relativistic jets | 5 × 1019 meters | — |
Canis Major Dwarf Galaxy | — | 5,000 light years 5 × 1019 meters |
Canes Venatici I | — | 6,500 light years 6.5 × 1019 meters |
Small Magellanic Cloud | 3.5 × 1019 meters | 7,000 light years 7 × 1019 meters |
Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy | 1019 meters | 10,000 light years 1020 meters |
Large Magellanic Cloud | 7.5 × 1019 meters | 14,000 light years 1.4 × 1020 meters |
NGC 3310 | — | 22,000 light years 2.2 × 1020 meters |
NGC 7714 | 3.5 × 1020 meters | — |
Triangulum | 5 × 1020 meters | 50,000 light years 5 × 1020 meters |
Sombrero Galaxy | 7 × 1020 meters | 50,000 light years 5 × 1020 meters |
Black Eye Galaxy | 8.5 × 1020 meters | — |
Zettameter | 1021 meters | 1021 meters |
Milky Way | 1.2 × 1021 meters | 120,000 light years 1.2 × 1021 meters |
Andromeda | 1.5 × 1021 meters | 150,000 light years 1.5 × 1021 meters |
Cartwheel Galaxy | — | 150,000 light years 1.5 × 1021 meters |
Pinwheel Galaxy | 1.8 × 1021 meters | 170,000 light years 1.7 × 1021 meters |
Whirlpool Galaxy | — | 180,000 light years 1.8 × 1021 meters |
NGC 1232 | 2 × 1021 meters | 220,000 light years 2.2 × 1021 meters |
Virgo A | 2.5 × 1021 meters | 250,000 light years 2.5 × 1021 meters |
Tadpole Galaxy | — | 300,000 light years 3 × 1021 meters |
Distance Earth has traveled relative to the sun | — | 450,000 light years 4.5 × 1021 meters |
NGC 4889 | 5 × 1021 meters | 500,000 light years 5 × 1021 meters |
Distance to Andromeda | — | 2 million light years 2 × 1022 meters |
IC 1101 | 5 × 1022 meters | 5 million light years 5 × 1022 meters |
Abell 2029 | — | 6 million light years 6 × 1022 meters |
Local Group | 4 × 1022 meters | 10 million light years 1022 meters |
Fornax Cluster | — | 20 million light years 2 × 1023 meters |
Virgo Cluster | 1.55 × 1023 meters | 30 million light years 3 × 1023 meters |
Yottameter | 1024 meters | 1024 meters |
Virgo Supercluster | 1.5 × 1024 meters | 110 million light years 1.1 × 1024 meters |
Distance to the Great Attractor | — | 250 million light years 2.5 × 1024 meters |
Eridanus Supervoid | — | 500 million light years 5 × 1024 meters |
Distance to the Shapley Supercluster | — | 650 million light years 6.5 × 1024 meters |
Pisces-Cetus Supercluster Complex | — | 1 billion light years 1025 meters |
Sloan Great Wall | — | 1.3 billion light years 1.3 × 1025 meters |
Gigaparsec | — | 3.3 billion light years 3.3 × 1025 meters |
Distance to the Hubble Deep Field | — | 12.7 billion light years 1.27 × 1026 meters |
Observable universe | 1.4 × 1026 meters | 93.4 billion light years 9.34 × 1026 meters |
Estimated size of the universe | 9.3 × 1026 meters | 160 billion light years 1.6 × 1027 meters |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "'The Scale of the Universe,' by Two Teenage Brothers". ABC News. Retrieved 2023-08-25.
- ^ a b "WGSBN Bulletin 1, #3" (PDF). WGSBN Bulletin. 1 (3). International Astronomical Union: 7. 16 June 2021. Retrieved 18 September 2024.
- ^ Murphy, Dan (1 March 2012). "Something beautiful: Cary Huang's Scale of the Universe".
- ^ Wired Staff [3/1/12] - The Scale of the Universe: an Interactive Infographic
- ^ Michigan Radio Offbeat: Two 14 Year Olds Show Us The Scale Of The Universe
- ^ The Scale of the Universe 2. htwins.net
- ^ Hill, David J. (2012-04-15). ""The Scale Of The Universe 2" Animation Made By 14-Year-Olds Is Mind Blowing". Singularity Hub. Retrieved 2023-08-25.
- ^ Rao, Mallika (2012-07-20). "'The Scale Of The Universe 2': Cary And Michael Huang Let You Scroll Through The Universe (PHOTOS)". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2022-01-30.
- ^ "APOD: 2018 October 7 - The Scale of the Universe Interactive". NASA. October 7, 2018. Retrieved 2023-08-25.
- ^ @carykh (October 4, 2020). Hey Kurzgesagt! Hello from Scale of the Universe's Creator. YouTube. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
- ^ VanderBorght, Mieke. "Universe in a Nutshell App Review". Common Sense Media. Retrieved August 25, 2023.