Parallax
Parallax
An Introduction To Parallax
OR
Just How Far Away Is That Star, Anyway?
Materials Needed
3. How the apparent motion of your finger would change if you moved your finger twice as far from your face?
4. Now do this. Was your prediction correct? Comment.
5. If you had amazing Stretch Armstrong arms, is there a limit to how far you could move your finger and still
see it appear to move? If so, how far away do you think that would be? (To get an idea of this distance, have
someone far away from you hold up their finger.)
6. What is it about our eyes that allows us to see this apparent motion?
1 This activity is adapted from an activity listed in the University of Washingtons Introductory Astronomy Clearinghouse. The original
activity is here: http://www.astro.washington.edu/courses/labs/clearinghouse/labs/Parallax/parallax stars tutorial.pdf.
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Part II: What happens when your finger is a star?
7. The point labeled E in Figure 2 represents the Earth in
its orbit in January. Use a ruler and draw a line from the
Earth to the background stars going through Star A. Mark
the EarthStar ASun angle. This is called the parallax.
8. Describe what you think will happen to that angle if we
were to do what we just did but for Star B.
12. How about star B over the same number of years compared
to the motion of Star A?
Fig. 3. Where would Star A appear relative to the background in January? Six months later?
Team RV presents
14. Below is a set of parallax observations of different stars. Rank them from nearest to farthest. Explain your logic.
Farthest.
Nearest
Part III: What happens when your eyes are far, far apart?
15. We used Figure 2 to examine the parallax angle of Stars A and B. Lets focus on Star A for now. What would
happen to the parallax angle of A if we measured it from Mars instead of Earth?
17. Now test your predictions as well as those of Student 1 and Student 2. Do this by repeating what we did in
question 7, but use the orbit of Mars in Figure 2. What are your results? Why would a longer baseline be
desirable?
Bonus:
1. Why might the argument between passenger and driver be worse in a British car?
2. What other techniques can we use to measure the distances to objects in the Solar System? Why wont these
work to measure the distance to even the nearest star?
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Part IV: What happens when your finger is REALLY far away?
Even the nearest star, Alpha Centauri,
is more than 200,000 times further away
than the diameter of the Earths orbit.
This means that the shift in angle we
observe in Alpha Centauri is less than 1
second of arc, or less than the thickness
of a hair seen across a large rooma .
It was not until the mid19th century
that astronomers were able to measure
such small parallaxes. In recent years,
good parallax measurements, previously
limited to a few thousand stars, have
been extended to greater distances by
the scientific satellite Hipparcos. But
ultimately, even from space, parallax
distances can only be measured for a
relatively small number of objects that
are relatively nearby.
A full discussion of how we estimate
distances to objects for which we cannot
obtain parallax measurements is beyond
the scope of this activity. But it is
important to note that ultimately all of
the different techniques we use link back
to parallax measurements, which is why
parallax is often referred to as the first
step in the astronomical distance ladder
(see Figure 4).
For a suite of activities about the expanding universe and the distance ladder, see
http://www.iop.org/activity/education/.
This text and Figure 4 are adapted from
The ladder of astronomical distances
(TAP 7048) handout available there.
a You may have heard astronomers use parsecs
when discussing distances. A parsec is the distance at which a star would shift by 1 second of
arc to and fro as the Earth moves round its orbit,
and its equal to roughly 3 lightyears.