What is the parallax formula and how is it used to calculate the distance between two stars?
1 Answer
The parallax formula states that the distance to a star is equal to 1 divided by the parallax angle,
Explanation:
Parallax is a method of using two points of observation to measure the distance to an object by observing how it appears to move against a background. One way to understand parallax is to look at a nearby object and note its position against a wall. If you look with just one eye, then the other, the object will appear to move against the background.
Because your eyes are separated by several centimeters, each eye has a different perspective of where the object is relative to the background. The closer the object is, the more it appears to move relative to the background. This is true in astronomy as well, but on a much larger scale.
In astronomy, the distances to other stars is too great to measure using two objects on the Earth's surface. Lucky for us, the Earth itself moves. If we made two observations of the same star on opposite sides of the Earth's orbit, we would have a separation of
This is enough to get a noticeable angle,
Since the star will be very far away, we can make the assumption that
Astronomical units are not the most convenient units to work with, though, so instead we define a parsec to be the distance to a star that shows
Where