Convert Sextants to Arcseconds
Convert Sextants (sxt) to Arcseconds (″) instantly and accurately.
Conversion Formula
″ = sxt × 216000
About Sextants
A sextant, as an angle unit, equals 1/6 of a full circle - π/3 rad = exactly 60°. The marine sextant (invented ~1730s by John Hadley and Thomas Godfrey) measures the altitude between a celestial body and the horizon; its 60° arc gives 120° measurement range via double reflection. The 60° angle is geometrically fundamental: equilateral triangles, regular hexagons, hexagonal crystal structures, and sp²-hybridised carbon (benzene, graphene) all exhibit 60° symmetry. 1 sextant = 60° = π/3 rad = 100 grad.
About Arcseconds
An arcsecond (″) is 1/3,600 of a degree - π/648,000 rad ≈ 4.848 × 10⁻⁶ rad. It is the fundamental resolution unit of classical astronomy and geodetic surveying. The Hubble Space Telescope delivers ~0.05″ resolution; atmospheric seeing at excellent sites gives 0.4-0.6″. Stellar parallax of Proxima Centauri is 0.7687″, defining its distance of 1.3009 parsecs. The parsec is defined as the distance at which 1 AU subtends exactly 1 arcsecond - giving 1 pc = 3.0857 × 10¹⁶ m. 1″ = π/648,000 rad ≈ 4.848 µrad.
Quick Reference Table
| Sextants (sxt) | Arcseconds (″) |
|---|---|
| 1 sxt | 216000 ″ |
| 2 sxt | 432000 ″ |
| 5 sxt | 1080000 ″ |
| 10 sxt | 2160000 ″ |
| 25 sxt | 5400000 ″ |
| 50 sxt | 10800000 ″ |
| 100 sxt | 21600000 ″ |