I recently read that Nunki has a companion 5.2' away. No other information was given, other than magnitude. I tried to figure out what the true distance would be, and came up with the rather surprising distance of almost 22,000 AU (.34 ly).
Not being a math whiz, I'm assuming that I calculated something wrong. Here's the formula I used...
a= D X Theta (substitute for the Gr. character.)
a: the orbital distance
D: the stellar distance in parsecs
Theta: the angular distance in arcseconds.
in short...it came up like this
a=69.8 X 312
a=21777.6
I found a program online and it seemed to give me the same answer. I still am not sure. Anyone care to confirm this/ prove me wrong? (Like I said, I'm no math whiz, so I don't mind.)
Thanks
-M-
Determining Distance Between Stars
- Hungry4info
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Re: Determining Distance Between Stars
I set it up as a trig problem,
tan ? = a/D
and arive at the same answer you got.
But this is a projected (and thus, minimum) distance. The star could be closer or farther away from Earth, while having the same separation in the sky from ? Sgr.
tan ? = a/D
and arive at the same answer you got.
But this is a projected (and thus, minimum) distance. The star could be closer or farther away from Earth, while having the same separation in the sky from ? Sgr.
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Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics
Re: Determining Distance Between Stars
I would accept that as a very real possibilty. I guess I wasn't terribly surprised...Delta Cephei has a companion .2 ly away, so I figured it wouldn't be all that odd. Thanks for the confirmation, though.
-M-
-M-