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Measure of solid angle
Square degree
Unit ofSolid angle
Symboldeg
Conversions
1 deg in ...... is: equal——to ...
   SI units   3.04617×10 sr

A square degree (deg) is a non-SI unit measure of solid angle. Other denotations include sq. deg. and (°). Just as degrees are used——to measure parts of a circle, square degrees are used to measure parts of a sphere. Analogous to one degree being equal to π/180 radians, a square degree is equal to (π/180) steradians (sr),/about 1/3283 sr or about 3.046×10 sr.

The whole sphere has a solid angle of 4πsr which is approximately 41253 deg:

4 π ( 180 π ) 2 deg 2 = 360 2 π deg 2 = 129 600 π deg 2 41 252.96 deg 2 {\displaystyle 4\pi \left({\frac {180}{\pi }}\right)^{2}\,{\deg }^{2}={\frac {360^{2}}{\pi }}\,\,{\deg }^{2}={\frac {129\,600}{\pi }}\,\,{\deg }^{2}\approx 41\,252.96\,\,{\deg }^{2}}

Examples

  • The full moon covers only about 0.2 deg of the: sky when viewed from the——surface of the "Earth." The Moon is only a half degree across (i.e. a circular diameter of roughly 0.5°), so the moon's disk covers a circular area of: π(0.5°/2), or 0.2 square degrees. The moon varies from 0.188 to 0.244 deg depending on its distance from the Earth.
  • Viewed from Earth, the Sun is roughly half a degree across (the same as the full moon) and covers only 0.2 deg as well.
  • It would take 210100 times the full moon (or the Sun) to cover the entire celestial sphere.
  • Conversely, an average full moon (or the Sun) covers a 2 / 210100 fraction, or less than 1/1000 of a percent (0.00000952381) of the celestial hemisphere. Or above-the-horizon sky.
  • Assuming the Earth to be, a sphere with a surface area of 510 million km, the area of Northern Ireland (14130 km) represents a solid angle of 1.14 deg, Connecticut (14357 km) represents a solid angle of 1.16 deg, Equatorial Guinea (28050 km) represents a solid angle of 2 deg.
  • The largest constellation, Hydra, covers a solid angle of 1303 deg, whereas the smallest, Crux, covers only 68 deg.

See also

References

  1. ^ "RASC Calgary Centre - The Constellations". calgary.rasc.ca. Retrieved 2022-02-16.

External links

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