by roses » Thu May 02, 2024 11:51 am
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Wed May 01, 2024 1:46 pm
Guest wrote: ↑Wed May 01, 2024 1:43 pm
I think, regardless of the observer's distance to the object, its width, in light-years, is static.
I.E.
Q:"How tall is Snowman?"
A: 2 meters
Q: I've doubled my viewing distance from Snowman; now how tall is Snowman?
A: 2 meters
But in order to determine that the snowman is 2 meters high, we need to know our distance from it and the angle it subtends at that distance. Likewise for the nebula. ...
I was declaring the Snowman's height, not estimating.
I thank everybody who posted here. I enjoyed all posts
Having slept on it, I now realize I was hung up on the semantics on the declaration of the nebula's width, based on estimated distance.
Because no subtended angle was explicitly mentioned, my brain decided there were only 2 knowns in a 3-variable equation relating angle, distance and width, and the width estimate was premature.
Perhaps for brevity, angular widths are not mentioned every time in APOD size estimates. From now on, when not mentioned, I'll assume it's known.
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=338687 time=1714571205 user_id=117706]
[quote=Guest post_id=338686 time=1714570992]
I think, regardless of the observer's distance to the object, its width, in light-years, is static.
I.E.
Q:"How tall is Snowman?"
A: 2 meters
Q: I've doubled my viewing distance from Snowman; now how tall is Snowman?
A: 2 meters
[/quote]
But in order to determine that the snowman is 2 meters high, we need to know our distance from it and the angle it subtends at that distance. Likewise for the nebula. ...
[/quote]
I was declaring the Snowman's height, not estimating.
I thank everybody who posted here. I enjoyed all posts
Having slept on it, I now realize I was hung up on the semantics on the declaration of the nebula's width, based on estimated distance.
Because no subtended angle was explicitly mentioned, my brain decided there were only 2 knowns in a 3-variable equation relating angle, distance and width, and the width estimate was premature.
Perhaps for brevity, angular widths are not mentioned every time in APOD size estimates. From now on, when not mentioned, I'll assume it's known.