Unit Conversion: Astronomical Units, Parsecs and Light Years

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the conversion between astronomical units (AUs) and parsecs, specifically addressing a physics problem about their relationship. The original poster struggles with understanding the concept of arc length and the significance of arc seconds in the context of parsecs. A key clarification provided is that "1s" refers to one arc second, which is crucial for solving the problem. The conversion factor established is that one parsec equals approximately 206,265 AUs. Ultimately, the original poster successfully resolves the problem after receiving this clarification.
iwantpi
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Hi everyone,
It's been years since I solved a physics problem for school. Now that I'm back at it I could use some help on this problem:


Question

"The astonomical unit (AU) is defined as the mean centre to centre distance from Earth to the Sun, namely 1.496 x 10^11 m. The parsec is the radius of a circle for which a central angle of 1s intercepts an arc of length 1AU. The light year is the distance that light travels in 1 year. (a) How many parsecs are there in one AU?

The attempt at a solution

I can do simple conversions of units, but I'm having trouble figuring out the connection between AUs and parsecs. I know that Arc length = r * angle (in rad) which leaves me with 1 AU = 1 parsec * 1s. But then again s is seconds, not radians...
Another way I attempted the problem was to assume that the arc of a circle whose radian is 1 parsec is so large that I can assume that the arc is a straight line, is that a fair assumption?

I'd really appreciate any corrections or just a hint in the right direction, not the full answer, and then hopefully I can work out the other parts of the problem myself. Thank you in advance!
 
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iwantpi said:
Hi everyone,
It's been years since I solved a physics problem for school. Now that I'm back at it I could use some help on this problem:


Question

"The astonomical unit (AU) is defined as the mean centre to centre distance from Earth to the Sun, namely 1.496 x 10^11 m. The parsec is the radius of a circle for which a central angle of 1s intercepts an arc of length 1AU. The light year is the distance that light travels in 1 year. (a) How many parsecs are there in one AU?

The attempt at a solution

I can do simple conversions of units, but I'm having trouble figuring out the connection between AUs and parsecs. I know that Arc length = r * angle (in rad) which leaves me with 1 AU = 1 parsec * 1s. But then again s is seconds, not radians...
Another way I attempted the problem was to assume that the arc of a circle whose radian is 1 parsec is so large that I can assume that the arc is a straight line, is that a fair assumption?

I'd really appreciate any corrections or just a hint in the right direction, not the full answer, and then hopefully I can work out the other parts of the problem myself. Thank you in advance!

Hi iwantpi, Welcome to Physics Forums.

The '1s' above is 1 arc second, an angle. Remember that degrees are divided up into 60 arcminutes, which are in turn divided into 60 arcseconds.
 
1 parsec = 206264.984626 au
I got it from aconverter.net, which I usually used. hope this help.
 
Thanks for all the help you two and sorry bout the late reply. I figured it out. It wasn't so hard once you guys told me about the arc second thing. Thanks again.
 
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