W6CWJ wrote:I would like to see the angular width of the APOD in arc seconds posted along with the photo.
Jerry
Maui
For example:
M76 Above and Below (Little Dumbbell Nebula) - APOD 2008 November 21
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap081121.html
APOD wrote:Distance estimates place M76 about 3 to 5 thousand light-years away toward the heroic constellation Perseus, making the nebula over a light-year in diameter.
Okay, until someone else starts doing my homework for me, I whip out my calculator from my handy desk drawer.
1 ly divided by 3,000 ly is 1/3000.
Take the arctan or arcsin (close enough) of 1/3000 in degrees.
Multiply by 3600 to convert degrees to arc seconds.
1 ly divided by 5,000 ly is 1/5000.
Take the arctan or arcsin (close enough) of 1/5000 in degrees.
Multiply by 3600 to convert degrees to arc seconds.
So M76 is about 40 to 70 arc seconds in diameter.
Not every APOD description provides enough information to do this calculation, either, but if it's there it's easy enough to use. If your calculator is not solar and the battery is dead, I recommend referring to the Messier place mats (the ones with the column for angular size) available at the Dollar Store in Roswell, NM (but they close at 5:00). Sorry, Jerry (and welcome to the forum, too) - that's for mainlanders - you can get the same thing (and the matching shower curtain) at the Keck gift shop.
Of course, angular size is measurable while the other two variables (actual size and distance) are educated guesses. So it's backwards to calculate a measurable quantity from the guesses (actually one guess determines the other - distance vs. size - once you have the angular measurement), but in this case we could only work with what we were given - hence an answer ranging from 40 to 70 arc seconds instead of a single number.
[quote="W6CWJ"]I would like to see the angular width of the APOD in arc seconds posted along with the photo.
Jerry
Maui[/quote]
For example:
M76 Above and Below (Little Dumbbell Nebula) - APOD 2008 November 21
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap081121.html
[quote="APOD"]Distance estimates place M76 about 3 to 5 thousand light-years away toward the heroic constellation Perseus, making the nebula over a light-year in diameter.[/quote]
Okay, until someone else starts doing my homework for me, I whip out my calculator from my handy desk drawer.
1 ly divided by 3,000 ly is 1/3000.
Take the arctan or arcsin (close enough) of 1/3000 in degrees.
Multiply by 3600 to convert degrees to arc seconds.
1 ly divided by 5,000 ly is 1/5000.
Take the arctan or arcsin (close enough) of 1/5000 in degrees.
Multiply by 3600 to convert degrees to arc seconds.
So M76 is about 40 to 70 arc seconds in diameter.
Not every APOD description provides enough information to do this calculation, either, but if it's there it's easy enough to use. If your calculator is not solar and the battery is dead, I recommend referring to the Messier place mats (the ones with the column for angular size) available at the Dollar Store in Roswell, NM (but they close at 5:00). Sorry, Jerry (and welcome to the forum, too) - that's for mainlanders - you can get the same thing (and the matching shower curtain) at the Keck gift shop.
Of course, angular size is measurable while the other two variables (actual size and distance) are educated guesses. So it's backwards to calculate a measurable quantity from the guesses (actually one guess determines the other - distance vs. size - once you have the angular measurement), but in this case we could only work with what we were given - hence an answer ranging from 40 to 70 arc seconds instead of a single number.