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Could someone explain why a precise measurement of an AU is important?
I faintly remember reading something about how Shapiro's radar reflecting expermiments (in the 60s/70s) increased the precision of this measurement dramatically but forgot why it had an impact (presumably it was needed to precisely calculate orbits so that we could sent the various explorers to other planets.). Thanks, Ted [Mod. note: because it determines the baseline for parallax measurements, an accurate value for the AU is also vital to accurate measurements of distances outside our solar system -- mjh] |
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In message , Ted Sung
writes Could someone explain why a precise measurement of an AU is important? I faintly remember reading something about how Shapiro's radar reflecting expermiments (in the 60s/70s) increased the precision of this measurement dramatically but forgot why it had an impact (presumably it was needed to precisely calculate orbits so that we could sent the various explorers to other planets.). Thanks, Ted [Mod. note: because it determines the baseline for parallax measurements, an accurate value for the AU is also vital to accurate measurements of distances outside our solar system -- mjh] But isn't the error in measurements outside the solar system almost entirely due to errors in the small angles involved? For instance we know the distance to Deneb to within 36%, but the distance to alpha Centuari to 0.23%. -- Save the Hubble Space Telescope! Replies to jsilverlight AT merseia.fsnet.co.uk are welcome. |
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In article ,
Jonathan Silverlight wrote: (quoting a moderator's note) [Mod. note: because it determines the baseline for parallax measurements, an accurate value for the AU is also vital to accurate measurements of distances outside our solar system -- mjh] But isn't the error in measurements outside the solar system almost entirely due to errors in the small angles involved? For instance we know the distance to Deneb to within 36%, but the distance to alpha Centuari to 0.23%. Different sort of error. Not knowing the AU precisely gives you a systematic error -- at least if you want to convert distances into metres and do physics with them. Not being able to measure parallaxes precisely gives you a measurement error, which is what you're talking about. Martin -- Martin Hardcastle Department of Physics, University of Bristol |
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