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The Pythagorean Theorem - Educational Outreach

The Pythagorean Theorem - Educational Outreach

The Pythagorean Theorem - Educational Outreach

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CEarth at point C in itsorbit about the sunSunBParallax angle> 1212AlphaCentauriDAEarth at point A, six months laterand diametrically opposite CFigure 4.13: From Sun to Alpha CentauriEarth, Moon, Sun, and Stars, the section title hints at aprogressive journey using ever-increasing stepping stones.<strong>The</strong> Greeks were limited to the known solar system.Starting in the 1800s, increasingly sophisticatedastronomical instrumentation made determination of stellardistances possible by allowing the measurement of very tinyangles just a few seconds in size, as depicted via the muchmagnified angle in Figure 4.13. From the measurementof tiny angles and the building of huge imaginaryinterstellar triangles, astronomers could ascertaintremendous distances using a <strong>Pythagorean</strong>-based methodcalled the parallax technique. Figure 4.13 illustrates theuse of the parallax technique to find the distance to ournearest stellar neighbor, Alpha Centauri, about 4 .2ly(lightyears) from the sun.<strong>The</strong> position of the target star, in this case Alpha Centari, ismeasured from two diametrically opposite points on theearth’s orbit. <strong>The</strong> difference in angular location against abackdrop of much farther ‘fixed’ stars is called the parallaxangle . Half the parallax angle is then used to compute thedistance to the star by the expression155

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