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Learn Astronomy
Astronomy News and Tutorials
Sizing Up Planets: How It's Done and How You Could Do ITEver wondered how scientists came up with planet sizes? It's not like somebody took a really long measuring tape and wrapped this around one planet to take its specs, right? Well, it has to do with mathematics and the gift of observation. Distance did it Enter the parallax effect, where different observers from different parts of Earth observed the planets when they passed in their orbit closest to our planet. Knowing the exact distance between observers and the time they observed the planets allowed scientists and astronomers to compute those planets' distance using trigonometry. With radar, the computation of distance became precise. Using the formula: speed of light multiplied by total time it took for the radar beam to travel to the planet and back divided by 2. With this, one astronomical unit is now known to be 149,597,892 kms. Measuring the planet's size Once you know the planet's distance from the Earth, you can compute the linear diameter by this formula: the distance of the planet multiplied by degree of the angular size divided by 360 degrees. Multiply this by 2p, with p = 3.14. If you can master this formula, you can compute the actual diameters of other celestial objects like star clusters, moons and even galaxies. Another way to determine a planet's size is to consider its volume, or the space that it occupies. Planets are spherical in shape, although they aren't perfect. Thanks to gravity, the planets are compressed while rapid spinning causes it to bulge a little at the site of the equator. Because of its shape, the volume of a planet can be determined through this calculation: volume = (p/6) x diameter cubed, with p for orbital period.
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