Anonymous wrote:Oh, the shame of it! I used to know the distance of all the planets in the solar system to 2 decimal places in AU. That's a worse mistake than my 'the moon's apparent magnitude is -18' (it's -12). How did I do that? I'll tell you how I did that. I read all 6 pages of this thread to make sure I really followed it, and filtered out the 2 or 3 sub-topics along the way, then spent ages editing my thoughts. I was so tired, that when I tried to recall Saturn's distance, the number 29.5 popped into my head. Now I realise, I confused Saturn's year with its distance. Please forgive me!Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:Spaceman Spiff wrote:I'm amazed! Saturn and Titan are 30 times the distance from the sun as Earth. By the inverse square law, sunlight is then 900 times weaker.
Er, no.
30 times the distance from the sun as Earth is 30 AU, which is roughly where Neptune is.
Saturn is 10 AU from Sol. So actually it's getting 1/100th of the light that Earth gets, since it's 10 times further away.
You know Bode's "Law" comes in pretty handy for these kind of things, except that the estimate it gives for Neptune is actually rather closer to Pluto IIRC...
0,3,6,12,24,48... then add four and divide by ten to get the distance in AU, and watch out for Ceres.