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Parsec - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Parsec

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1 parsec =
International units
30.857×1015m 30.857×1012km
30.857×1018mm 308.568×1024Å
206.265×103AU 3.262 ly
US customary / Imperial units
1.215×1018in 101.236×1015ft
33.745×1015yd 19.174×1012mi
A parsec is the distance from the Earth to an astronomical object which has a parallax angle of one arcsecond.
A parsec is the distance from the Earth to an astronomical object which has a parallax angle of one arcsecond.
See 1 E16 m for comparable lengths, and scientific notation for an explanation of the notation used in this article.

The parsec (symbol pc) is a unit of length used in astronomy. The length of the parsec is based on the method of trigonometric parallax, one of the oldest methods for measuring the distances to stars.

The name parsec stands for "parallax of one second of arc", and one parsec is defined to be the distance from the Earth to a star that has a parallax of 1 arcsecond.

Contents

[edit] History

The first direct measurements of an object at interstellar distances were undertaken by Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel in 1838, who used the width of the Earth's orbit as a baseline to calculate the distance of 61 Cygni using parallax and trigonometry.[1] The parallax of a star is half of the angular distance a star appears to move relative to the celestial sphere as Earth orbits around the Sun; or, equivalently, it is the angle subtended at a star by the semi-major axis of the Earth's orbit. The use of the parsec as a unit of distance follows naturally from this method, since distance (in parsecs) is simply the reciprocal of the parallax angle (in arcseconds). That is, it is the distance at which the semi-major axis of the Earth's orbit would subtend an angle of one second of arc. (See diagram above.)

Though it had probably been used before, the term parsec was first mentioned in an astronomical publication in 1913, when Astronomer Royal Frank Watson Dyson expressed his concern for the need of a name for that unit of distance: he proposes the name astron, but mentions that Carl Charlier had suggested siriometer, and Herbert Hall Turner had suggested parsec.[2]

[edit] Usage and Measurement

The parallax method is the fundamental calibration step for distance determination in astrophysics, and the natural unit for such measurements, the parsec, has become the most commonly used unit of distance in scholarly astronomical publications. Articles aimed at a wider audience, such as in newspapers and popular science magazines, often use a more intuitive unit, the light-year (LY).

There is no star whose parallax is more than 1 arcsecond. Other than the Sun, the closest star to the Earth, which therefore has the largest measured parallax, is Proxima Centauri with a parallax of 0.77233 arcseconds; it is thus 1.295 pc (4.225 LY) away from the Earth.

Refraction caused by the atmosphere, also known as astronomical seeing, limits ground-based telescopes to parallax angle measurement accuracies of less than approximately 0.001 arcsec,[citation needed] so reliable measurements, those with errors of 10% or less, can only be achieved at stellar distances of no more than about 100 pc, or 325 LY. Space-based telescopes are not limited by this effect and can accurately measure distances to objects beyond the limit of ground-based observations.

Between 1989 and 1993, the Hipparcos satellite, launched by the European Space Agency (ESA), measured parallaxes for about 100,000 stars with an astrometric precision of about 0.97 milliarcseconds, and obtained accurate measurements for stellar distances of stars up to 1,000 pc away.[citation needed] NASA's FAME satellite was due to be launched in 2004, to measure parallaxes for about 40 million stars with sufficient precision to measure stellar distances of up to 2,000 pc. However, the mission's funding was withdrawn by NASA in January 2002.[3] ESA's GAIA satellite, due to be launched in December 2011, is intended to measure one billion stellar distances to within 20 microarcseconds, producing errors of 10% in measurements as far as the Galactic Center, about 8,000 pc away in the constellation of Sagittarius.[4]

[edit] Distances in parsecs

[edit] Distances less than a parsec

Distances measured in fractions of a parsec usually involve objects within a single star system. So, for example:

[edit] Parsecs and kiloparsecs

Distances measured in parsecs include distances between nearby stars, such as those in the same spiral arm or globular cluster. A distance of one thousand parsecs (approximately 3,262 ly) is commonly denoted by the kiloparsec (kpc). Astronomers typically use kiloparsecs to measure distances between parts of a galaxy, or within groups of galaxies. So, for example:

  • the nearest known star to the Earth, other than the Sun, is Proxima Centauri, 1.29 parsecs away.
  • the center of the Milky Way is about 8 kpc from the Earth, and the Milky Way is about 30 kpc across.
  • the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is the most distant object visible to the naked eye, a little under 800 kpc away from the Earth.

[edit] Megaparsecs and gigaparsecs

A distance of one million parsecs (approximately 3,262,000 ly) is commonly denoted by the megaparsec (Mpc). Astronomers typically measure the distances between neighboring galaxies and galaxy clusters in megaparsecs.

One gigaparsec (Gpc) is one billion parsecs — one of the largest distance measures commonly used. One gigaparsec is about 3.262 billion light-years, or roughly one fourteenth of the distance to the horizon of the observable universe (dictated by the cosmic background radiation). Astronomers typically use gigaparsecs to measure supergalactic structures, such as the Great Wall, or on a cosmological scale, such as the distances between clusters of galaxies, quasars. So, for example:

[edit] Calculating the value of a parsec

1 parsec is equal to 1 divided by the arcsecond value. (parsec=1/arcsec)

Image:Parsec.png

In the diagram above (not to scale), S represents the Sun, and E the Earth at one point in its orbit. D is an object at a distance of one parsec from the Sun. By definition, the angle D is one arcsecond, and the distance ES is one astronomical unit (AU). By trigonometry, the distance SD is

SD = \frac{ES}{\tan 1^{\prime\prime}} = 206,265 \mbox{AU}

One astronomical unit is equal to approximately 1.49598×108 km, so

1 \mbox{ pc} = 206,265 \times 1.49598 \times 10^{11} \mbox{m} = 3.08568 \times 10^{16} \mbox{m} \,

[edit] Parsecs in Pop Culture

Parsecs have been mentioned in many science fiction books, television series, and movies, such as Star Wars, particularly Episode IV: A New Hope. In a bar in Mos Eisley, Han Solo refers to the Millennium Falcon as "the ship that made the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs". It is not clear whether he was using parsec as a unit of time, distance, or something else. Parsecs are also mentioned in the various Star Trek series and films, as well as many of Isaac Asimov's books.

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Bessel, FW, "Bestimmung der Entfernung des 61sten Sterns des Schwans" (1838) Astronomische Nachrichten, Vol.16, p.65-96.
  2. ^ Dyson, F. W., "The distribution in space of the stars in Carrington's Circumpolar Catalogue" (1913) Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 73, p.334-342; see footnote on p.342.
  3. ^ FAME news, 25 January 2002.
  4. ^ GAIA from ESA.

[edit] See also

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