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originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
So the normal motion of the solar system will have more of an effect on the positions of stars than the motion of New Horizons over the years. However, even then the apparent star positions only change negligibly -- and in general imperceptibly without the use of measurement instruments -- over the span of a human lifetime.
originally posted by: Darkstar2
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
So the normal motion of the solar system will have more of an effect on the positions of stars than the motion of New Horizons over the years. However, even then the apparent star positions only change negligibly -- and in general imperceptibly without the use of measurement instruments -- over the span of a human lifetime.
It is nothing to do with the speed of the solar system, or that of the probe relative to the solar system. It is the distance apart of the earth and the probe.
The two pictures on the NASA site were taken at the same time as near as possible, and demonstrate parallax very nicely.
Even using the much smaller baseline of the earth's orbit, which is how parallax measurements are normally made, will show a shift of slightly under 1 arc second, and this method can be used out to about 300 ly.
And stars proper motions (movement in the sky) can be surprisingly large.
If you have Stellarium then check the values for Proxima Centauri. The proper motion is nearly 4 arc seconds per year.
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
The Earth, sun, and the rest of the Solar system are moving through the galaxy at about 500,000 mph (800,000 kph). New Horizons at top speed was moving at 52,000 mph (83,000 kph) but has since slowed from that speed due to the sun trying to pull it back over the years.
For argument's sake (and for round numbers sake), let's say say New Horizons average speed since launch is 50,000 mph. That's still 10 times slower that the Earth/solar system is moving relative to galaxy.
So the normal motion of the solar system will have more of an effect on the positions of stars than the motion of New Horizons over the years. However, even then the apparent star positions only change negligibly -- and in general imperceptibly without the use of measurement instruments -- over the span of a human lifetime.
No, I'm afraid you haven't grokked it yet, my friend.
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
a reply to: Arbitrageur
I get it.
Again, this is not true. Taking photos a year apart is like sitting on your horse on the merry-go-round and then later after the merry-go-round rotates, expecting to see a different view of the horses. You won't see a different view of the other horses, they are maintaining their positions relative to you. You have to actually send a "probe" or another person, to walk around on the merry go-round, to get a different view of the other horses, analogous to new horizons. So, the stars in our galaxy won't look much different due to a year of galactic rotation, especially not the stars in our region of the galaxy where parallax would be most pronounced, since their galactic orbital velocities match ours fairly closely though they may have other motion, suggested by the "noise" or variation above and below the average velocity line in the milky way orbital velocity graph in my previous post. Other galaxies are so distant that they won't look much different either.
The parallax between two images of the sky taken from Earth a year apart will be similar in magnitude to the current parallax between Earth and New Horizons.
Parallax only works for relatively close stars in our own galaxy. Other galaxies are simply too far away.
We don't get to play with accurate clocks here on ATS but wouldn't be quite a year..
More recently, in 2009, optical resonator experiments confirmed the absence of any aether wind at the 10−17 level.
where earth was just one year ago.
Yes, earthquakes can do it. Slichter's link mentions other possible factors which can affect earths rotation rate. There's a long term trend for Earth's orbit to get larger, mainly because the sun is losing mass every day as it converts hydrogen to helium, but since the orbit only gets bigger by 1.5 cm each year, most people will never notice, after all what's 1.5 cm compared to the distance from the Earth to the sun? But over time it adds up. One prediction is that when the sun turns into a red giant, it may expand as far as Earth's current orbit, but Earth may not get swallowed by the sun since its orbit will be significantly larger by then, billions of years from now. Those predictions have pretty big error bars though, so I don't think we know exactly how large the sun will get when it's dying.
originally posted by: Darkstar2
Earth spin rate will not affect the orbit of the earth.
I haven't seen any analysis of why this change of spin rate happened, but I know that one of the affecting items are earthquakes.
Milankovitch cycles describe the collective effects of changes in the Earth's movements on its climate over thousands of years.