Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

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Airspeed
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Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Airspeed »

We've just had the first of this year's three-night session of Stargazing, hosted by the abovementioned.
Apart from getting a young lady to drive a few kms along a section of beach, placing scale models of our Solar System's Sun and planets at scale distances, he went on to say that if you were in a (don't look Ben) 737, it would take 67 years to fly across the diameter of our Sun. If that wasn't enough, Betelgeuse in Orion, is larger, and IIRC would take 100 years in a 737 to get from the centre of B to the outside. *-)

EDIT: SEE CORRECTION BELOW.
Last edited by Airspeed on 23 May 2018, 05:16, edited 1 time in total.
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Nigel H-J
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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Nigel H-J »

he went on to say that if you were in a (don't look Ben) 737, it would take 67 years to fly across the diameter of our Sun.
That is unbelievable!! :-O I knew that the sun was big but..........not that big!!

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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Vancouver »

I think he is wildly mistaken. the diameter of the Sun is 864,938 miles, and the circumference is 2,713,406 miles.
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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by simondix »

Vancouver wrote:
22 May 2018, 19:10
I think he is wildly mistaken. the diameter of the Sun is 864,938 miles, and the circumference is 2,713,406 miles.
Depends which airline you use
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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by blanston12 »

Vancouver wrote:
22 May 2018, 19:10
I think he is wildly mistaken. the diameter of the Sun is 864,938 miles, and the circumference is 2,713,406 miles.
Yeah at 450 knots it would take 1922 hours or about 80 days

Around the equator is 6029 hours or 251 days.

Actually less I divided miles by knots but you get the idea.
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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Airspeed »

Sorry, it was me who was mistaken. :$
I've just re-watched the programme on "I-View", and it was 65 days in a 747.
However, I did quote the 100 years for travelling the radius of Betelgeuse correctly.
What I omitted was a reference to UY Scuti, which you can read about here: http://earthsky.org/space/how-big-is-th ... nster-star
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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Tomliner »

So I guess booking a weekend sightseeing trip there is out of the question then. :wasntme: EricT
ps in a few hours time we'll be boarding one of Ben's favourites to fly back to Edinburgh from Croatia.
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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Paul K »

Tomliner wrote:
23 May 2018, 05:55
ps in a few hours time we'll be boarding one of Ben's favourites to fly back to Edinburgh from Croatia.
If it's Ryanair, that really will seem like 67 years.

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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by FlyTexas »

Have a great/safe trip home, Eric. :)

Brian

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Re: Stargazing Prof. Brian Cox - perspective

Post by Tomliner »

Thank you Brian. Yes good flight and on time.
Paul, not Ryanair but Jet2 and if anyone is interested it was a 733 G-GDFO. I thought Ben would like to know!
Mike, sorry for hijacking your original thread. :) EricT
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