How do astronomers measure the distance to other stars? How accurate are their measurements?

1 Answer
Mar 17, 2016

Parallax angle = alpha, for the star G, between exactly N days. During N days, O turns through angle theta about Sun (S). The distance of the star OG = sin(theta/2)/sin(alpha/2) AU.

Explanation:

Let G denote the star.. Determine the chord distance between the two positions O_1 and O_2 of O, for the period of N days, in the orbit of O, about S.

Use the triangles O_1SO_2 and O_1GO_2 and equate the values

The star's distance is approximated by O_1G that is nearly O_2G

Observer's distance from the Sun is nearly 1 AU = 149597870 km.
For N days O turns around S through theta
= N X (360/365.256363) deg

The star's distance
= OS sin(theta/2)/sin(alpha/2)=sin(theta/2)/sin(alpha/2) AU-

If the precision for angular measurement is 1/1000 deg. N = 30 days will be sufficient for distances of single-digit light years. For larger distances, N has to be increased.

For Alpha Centauri A, at 4.2 ly = 4.2 X 62900 AU from us and with N = 30 days, alpha from this formula is 0..006 deg

For N = 30, theta = 29.568 deg.