5/16/2023 0 Comments Parsec unit of distance not timeThe director's commentary on the Blu-Ray Star Wars set explains that hyperspace travel requires heavy computation to compute a path that does not cause you to fly through a star. The Falcon, however, is fast enough to straighten the route and cut over six parsecs off the distance traveled. A standard ship has to do the run in eighteen parsecs because to cut the route any closer, the ship would get sucked in. Event horizons around black holes are dependent on the speed at which you are traveling. Anderson later retconned an explanation: the Kessel Run is through the Maw. (In the novelization, he said, "less than twelve standard timeparts." ) Screenwriter George Lucas claimed the seeming gaffe was intentional, showing that Han was something of a bull artist who didn't always know precisely what he was talking about. In Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, Han Solo boasted about the speed of his spaceship by claiming it made the Kessel Run in less than twelve parsecs, despite a parsec being a unit of distance. The latter is statistically more likely, since the odds of two random planets in the galaxy being within a parsec of each other are about one in a hundred billion. However, the map Amidala shows Anakin while talking about the distance only seems to zoom about tenfold from the entire galaxy, implying that either the Star Wars galaxy is very small (which seems unlikely, since no night sky seems to show the huge numbers of visible stars that would be consistent with the corresponding smaller interstellar distances), or Amidala misspoke. However, in The Courtship of Princess Leia, it takes more than a week to travel only seventy parsecs (the stated distance between Dathomir and Coruscant), and in Attack of the Clones, it seems to take many hours to travel the distance between Tatooine and Geonosis, which is stated to be less than a parsec. If the Star Wars galaxy is similar in size to ours, roughly 30,000 parsecs across, elementary arithmetic shows that any ship capable of traveling across the galaxy in only a few weeks could travel about a parsec per minute. The "Decoded" version of the Star Wars: The Clone Wars episode " Dooku Captured" says that six parsecs equals about 114 trillion miles, making one parsec about 19 trillion miles. The Star Wars parsec appears to be equivalent to the real-world measurement: The Essential Atlas says a parsec is 3.26 light-years. It is defined as 360×60×60/2π astronomical units (AU), which is equivalent to about 19.17 trillion miles, or about 3.262 light-years. In the real world, a parsec is a measurement of distance based on apparent stellar motion as observed from Earth. " I just found out that a parsec is a unit of distance, not speed!" ―A bitizen on the HoloNet
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