Lectures |
Table of Contents |
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| Person: | 2 meters (~ 6 feet) |
| Earth radius: | 6378 km (~4000 miles) |
| Average Earth <--> Sun Distance: | 1 Astronomical Unit (AU)~ 150,000,000 km |
| Average Pluto <--> Sun Distance: | 39.44 AU ~ 5,900,000,000 km (size of Solar System) |
| Sun <--> Proxima Centauri (nearest star): | 4.2 light year (l.y.) ~ 265,000 AU ~ 42,000,000,000,000 km |
| Sun <--> Center of Milky Way Galaxy: | 25,000 l.y. ~ 1,500,000,000 AU ~ 240,000,000,000,000,000 km |
| Milky Way <--> Andromeda Galaxy: | 2 million l.y. |
| Size of Observable Universe: | 15 billion l.y. |
Two ways to express very large (or very small) numbers:
| one | 1 = 100 | 1 = 100 | one |
| ten | 10 = 101 | 0.1 = 10-1 | tenth |
| hundred | 100 = 102 | 0.01 = 10-2 | hundredth |
| thousand | 1000 = 103 | 0.001 = 10-3 | thousandth |
| million | 1,000,000 = 106 | 0.000001 = 10-6 | millionth |
| billion | 1,000,000,000 = 109 | 0.000000001 = 10-9 | billionth |
| etc. ... bigger | etc. ... smaller | ||
| Trillion | Tera | (T) | 1012 |
| Billion | Giga | (G) | 109 |
| Million | Mega | (M) | 106 |
| Thousand | Kilo | (K) | 103 |
| ... | |||
| thousandth | milli | (m) | 10-3 |
| millionth | micro | (mu) | 10-6 |
| billionth | nano | (n) | 10-9 |
| trillionth | pico | (p) | 10-12 |
| atomic nucleus | 10-16 m |
| Hydrogen atom | 10-10 m |
| your height | 100 m |
| earth radius | 107 m |
| earth-sun distance | 1011 m |
| solar system | 1013 m |
| nearest star | 1016 m ~ one light year (lyr) |
| sun to galactic center | 1020 m |
| nearest galaxy | 1022 m 106 lyr, or 1,000,000 lyr, or "million" lyr |
c = speed of light = 3 x 108 m/s
It takes time for light to travel over distance
| Distance | Light Travel Times | ||
| earth to sun | 1.5x1011 m | 5x102s | 8.3 minutes |
| nearest star | ~1016 m | 3x107s | 1 year |
| nearest galaxy | ~1022 m | 3x1013s | 1 million, or 106 years |
| "Event Horizon" | 2x1026 m | 6x1017s | 20 billion, 2x1010 years, or 20 Gyr |
An object's angular size is the angle whose point is at your eyeball and whose sides encompass the object. Obviously if you move closer or further from the object, or if the object changes physical size, then its angular size will change.
Angular sizes are measured in degrees (e.g., 360o = 1
full circle, 90o = right angle, etc.), with smaller
divisions of 60 "arcminutes" (') per degree, and 60 "arcseconds" ('')per
arcminute (
60 x 60 = 3600 arcseconds
per degree).
Some examples:
| Betelgeuse (largest star) seen from Earth | 0.004'' |
| Smallest detail visible from Earth's surface | 1'' |
| Smallest detail visible to naked eye | 1' = 60'' |
| Sun or Moon seen from Earth | 0.5o = 30' |
| Your fingernail at arm's length | 1o = 60' |
| Your fist at arm's length | 10o |
| Thumb-to-pinky at arm's length | 20o |
| Horizon to zenith (point overhead) | 90o |