Tuesday, 3 May 2011

observation - Pinhole projector for the Transit of Mercury

I've just rewritten this answer - @MikeG caught a glaring error by pointing out a really basic handy relationship called the Rayleigh criterion.



begin{align} {theta}_R approx1.22 frac{lambda}{D}. end{align}



It's better to read the (or any) article, but very briefly, the angular resolution is roughly the ratio of the wavelength to the diameter of a circular aperture. You can apply this equally well to pinhole-only imaging, or to a system which images by focusing with curved mirrors or lenses.



Mercury's diameter is about 4900 km and since it will be on the line between the sun and the earth, the distance will be about 150,000,000 minus 58,000,000 or 92,000,000km. In that case the angular width of Mercury will be about:



begin{align} {theta}_{merc} approx frac{4.9 times 10^3 mathrm{km}}{9.2 times 10^7 mathrm{km}} approx 0.000052 mathrm{rad} approx 0.0031° approx 11 mathrm{arcsec}. end{align}



So to even poorly resolve Mercury as a dark fuzzy dot, you'd like the diffraction width to be equal or less than the angular width. If you set the two angles equal and let $lambda$ = 580 nm, you get



begin{align} D approx 1.22 frac{5.8 times 10^{-7} mathrm{m}}{theta_R} approx frac{7.1 times 10^{-7}}{5.2 times 10^{-5}} mathrm{m} approx 14 mathrm{mm} (minimum) end{align}



Since the light is essentially parallel, your geometrical resolution on the screen is about the diameter of the pinhole. To make a 5.2E-05 radian object 14mm on a screen the screen would have to be VERY far away:



begin{align} L_{to screen} approx frac{D}{theta_{merc}} approx frac{0.014}{0.000052} approx 270 meters! end{align}



You can try that, use a 14 or 20mm "pinhole" at 270 meters away, but I think the light will be far to faint to see. I once did something similar to see a solar eclipse. It may have been a 10mm "pinhole" but I'm sure I wasn't that far away. I used household mirrors to bring the light indoors to a very dark area, and it worked great. But that was at most only abour 30 meters!



If you would really like to try it, here are some tests you can do ahead of time:



  1. Search to see if someone has done it and given details

  2. Try some simple experiments using the full sun. If the fuzziness at the edge of the sun's image really seems to be 300 times smaller than the sun's image, then that's a suggestion that it might work.

  3. Check the internet for daily sun images and see if you can find a sunspot. Then test your setup and see if the sunspot suggests your resolution looks as good as 1/300.

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