astronomy

Ask questions about projects relating to: aerodynamics or hydrodynamics, astronomy, chemistry, electricity, electronics, physics, or engineering
Locked
ayabut
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2005 12:21 pm

astronomy

Post by ayabut »

I am testing stellar parallax theory. There is a lot of information about the theory, but not HOW to test it. Can anyone tell me HOW to go about testing this? I have a telescope, graph paper, objects. How far apart are the objects? How far do you place the telescope? What do you do?

If there is a website that tells how to do this, I'd love to go there. I've read others' abstracts about generally how to do it, but no specifics and I need the specifics in order to test it!

Thanks!
MaryB
Former Expert
Posts: 81
Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 1:14 pm
Occupation: Assistant Professor
Project Question: n/a
Project Due Date: n/a
Project Status: Not applicable

Post by MaryB »

Hi there,

Check out this link on the Science Buddies website:

https://www.sciencebuddies.org/mentorin ... ?from=Home

Also, here are a couple of other sites that have details about methods:

http://www.usc.edu/CSSF/History/2004/Projects/J1505.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallax

Hope this helps!

Mary
deleted-71360
Former Expert
Posts: 89
Joined: Wed Aug 31, 2005 6:58 pm

Post by deleted-71360 »

Stellar parallax is easy to explain but slow to demonstrate. To use the earth's position in its orbit to the best advantage requires two measurements six months apart. This is fine if you have the time.

A better way to demonstrate stellar parallax it is to model it using terestal parallax with photography. Take a picture of a close object with distant objects in the background. Move the camera sidewise and take a second picture. Explain how and why the near object appears in a different place relative to the distant objects behind it. Then relate that to the earth's motion relative to stars that are near and far from the earth and how the star's apparent position shifts. Note that the shift is very very small.

Robert Reavis
Locked

Return to “Physical Science”