Monday, January 11, 2010

A lesson in perspective

A wonderful image from Wikipedia that shows us how utterly insignificant we actually are.

For those of us who care about numbers, VY Canis Majoris, the very last star in that sequence, has a radius that may be 2,600 times that of our sun. The sun is approximately 109 times the radius of the earth. In other words, it would take approximately ( (2,600 x 109) ^ 3 =) 2.28 x 10^16, or 22.8 quadrillion, earths to fill this star's volume. If I remember my high school physics lessons, the earth's mean radius is around 6,400 km. This would give VY Canis Majoris a circumference of (2 * pi * 2,600 * 109 * 6,400 =) 11.4 billion km (if you ignore equatorial bulging due to rotation and whatnot). Very, very roughly put, it would take a beam of light (12 * 10^9 / 3 * 10^5 =) 40,000 seconds, or over 11 hours, to travel around the star.


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