Apparent and absolute magnitude
Luminosity
- The luminosity of a star is defined as
The total amount of light energy emitted by the star
- Luminosity is a measure of a star's brightness or power output
Apparent magnitude
- The brightness, or apparent magnitude, of a star depends on two main factors:
- the luminosity of the star
- the distance the star is from Earth (more distant stars are usually fainter than nearby stars)
- Apparent magnitude is defined as
The perceived brightness of a star as seen from Earth
- The apparent magnitude scale runs back to front:
- the brighter the star, the lower the magnitude
- the dimmer the star, the higher the magnitude
The apparent magnitude scale
Examples of the apparent magnitude of different astronomical bodies
Absolute magnitude
- Astronomers describe the brightness of stars at a standard distance using the absolute magnitude scale
- a bright star which is far away can look the same as a dim star which is nearby
- therefore, it is difficult to measure the brightness of stars directly
- Absolute magnitude is defined as
A measure of how bright stars would appear if they were all placed the same distance away from the Earth
- The standard distance astronomers use is 10 parsecs, 32.6 light-years or 3.04 × 1014 km away from the Earth