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Absolute magnitude

Absolute magnitude (M) is a measure of the luminosity of a celestial object on an inverse logarithmic astronomical magnitude scale. An object's absolute magnitude is defined to be equal to the apparent magnitude that the object would have if it were viewed from a distance of exactly 10 parsecs (32.6 light-years), without extinction (or dimming) of its light due to absorption by interstellar matter and cosmic dust. By hypothetically placing all objects at a standard reference distance from the observer, their luminosities can be directly compared among each other on a magnitude scale.

As with all astronomical magnitudes, the absolute magnitude can be specified for different wavelength ranges corresponding to specified filter bands or passbands; for stars a commonly quoted absolute magnitude is the absolute visual magnitude, which uses the visual (V) band of the spectrum (in the UBV photometric system). Absolute magnitudes are denoted by a capital M, with a subscript representing the filter band used for measurement, such as MV for absolute magnitude in the V band.

The more luminous an object, the smaller the numerical value of its absolute magnitude. A difference of 5 magnitudes between the absolute magnitudes of two objects corresponds to a ratio of 100 in their luminosities, and a difference of n magnitudes in absolute magnitude corresponds to a luminosity ratio of 100n/5. For example, a star of absolute magnitude MV = 3.0 would be 100 times as luminous as a star of absolute magnitude MV = 8.0 as measured in the V filter band. The Sun has absolute magnitude MV = +4.83.[1] Highly luminous objects can have negative absolute magnitudes: for example, the Milky Way galaxy has an absolute B magnitude of about −20.8.[2]

An object's absolute bolometric magnitude (Mbol) represents its total luminosity over all wavelengths, rather than in a single filter band, as expressed on a logarithmic magnitude scale. To convert from an absolute magnitude in a specific filter band to absolute bolometric magnitude, a bolometric correction (BC) is applied.[3]

For Solar System bodies that shine in reflected light, a different definition of absolute magnitude (H) is used, based on a standard reference distance of one astronomical unit.

Stars and galaxies

In stellar and galactic astronomy, the standard distance is 10 parsecs (about 32.616 light-years, 308.57 petameters or 308.57 trillion kilometres). A star at 10 parsecs has a parallax of 0.1″ (100 milliarcseconds). Galaxies (and other extended objects) are much larger than 10 parsecs, their light is radiated over an extended patch of sky, and their overall brightness cannot be directly observed from relatively short distances, but the same convention is used. A galaxy's magnitude is defined by measuring all the light radiated over the entire object, treating that integrated brightness as the brightness of a single point-like or star-like source, and computing the magnitude of that point-like source as it would appear if observed at the standard 10 parsecs distance. Consequently, the absolute magnitude of any object equals the apparent magnitude it would have if it were 10 parsecs away.

Some stars visible to the naked eye have such a low absolute magnitude that they would appear bright enough to outshine the planets and cast shadows if they were at 10 parsecs from the Earth. Examples include Rigel (−7.0), Deneb (−7.2), Naos (−6.0), and Betelgeuse (−5.6). For comparison, Sirius has an absolute magnitude of only 1.4, which is still brighter than the Sun, whose absolute visual magnitude is 4.83. The Sun's absolute bolometric magnitude is set arbitrarily, usually at 4.75.[4][5] Absolute magnitudes of stars generally range from approximately −10 to +20. The absolute magnitudes of galaxies can be much lower (brighter). For example, the giant elliptical galaxy M87 has an absolute magnitude of −22 (i.e. as bright as about 60,000 stars of magnitude −10). Some active galactic nuclei (quasars like CTA-102) can reach absolute magnitudes in excess of −32, making them the most luminous persistent objects in the observable universe, although these objects can vary in brightness over astronomically short timescales. At the extreme end, the optical afterglow of the gamma ray burst GRB 080319B reached, according to one paper, an absolute r magnitude brighter than −38 for a few tens of seconds.[6]

Apparent magnitude

The Greek astronomer Hipparchus established a numerical scale to describe the brightness of each star appearing in the sky. The brightest stars in the sky were assigned an apparent magnitude m = 1, and the dimmest stars visible to the naked eye are assigned m = 6.[7] The difference between them corresponds to a factor of 100 in brightness. For objects within the immediate neighborhood of the Sun, the absolute magnitude M and apparent magnitude m from any distance d (in parsecs, with 1 pc = 3.2616 light-years) are related by

 
where F is the radiant flux measured at distance d (in parsecs), F10 the radiant flux measured at distance 10 pc. Using the common logarithm, the equation can be written as
 
where it is assumed that extinction from gas and dust is negligible. Typical extinction rates within the Milky Way galaxy are 1 to 2 magnitudes per kiloparsec, when dark clouds are taken into account.[8]

For objects at very large distances (outside the Milky Way) the luminosity distance dL (distance defined using luminosity measurements) must be used instead of d, because the Euclidean approximation is invalid for distant objects. Instead, general relativity must be taken into account. Moreover, the cosmological redshift complicates the relationship between absolute and apparent magnitude, because the radiation observed was shifted into the red range of the spectrum. To compare the magnitudes of very distant objects with those of local objects, a K correction might have to be applied to the magnitudes of the distant objects.

The absolute magnitude M can also be written in terms of the apparent magnitude m and stellar parallax p:

 
or using apparent magnitude m and distance modulus μ:
 

Examples

Rigel has a visual magnitude mV of 0.12 and distance of about 860 light-years:

 

Vega has a parallax p of 0.129″, and an apparent magnitude mV of 0.03:

 

The Black Eye Galaxy has a visual magnitude mV of 9.36 and a distance modulus μ of 31.06:

 

Bolometric magnitude

The bolometric absolute magnitude Mbol, takes into account electromagnetic radiation at all wavelengths. It includes those unobserved due to instrumental passband, the Earth's atmospheric absorption, and extinction by interstellar dust. It is defined based on the luminosity of the stars. In the case of stars with few observations, it must be computed assuming an effective temperature.

Classically, the difference in bolometric magnitude is related to the luminosity ratio according to:[7]

 
which makes by inversion:
 
where
  • L is the Sun's luminosity (bolometric luminosity)
  • L is the star's luminosity (bolometric luminosity)
  • Mbol,⊙ is the bolometric magnitude of the Sun
  • Mbol,★ is the bolometric magnitude of the star.

In August 2015, the International Astronomical Union passed Resolution B2[9] defining the zero points of the absolute and apparent bolometric magnitude scales in SI units for power (watts) and irradiance (W/m2), respectively. Although bolometric magnitudes had been used by astronomers for many decades, there had been systematic differences in the absolute magnitude-luminosity scales presented in various astronomical references, and no international standardization. This led to systematic differences in bolometric corrections scales.[10] Combined with incorrect assumed absolute bolometric magnitudes for the Sun, this could lead to systematic errors in estimated stellar luminosities (and other stellar properties, such as radii or ages, which rely on stellar luminosity to be calculated).

Resolution B2 defines an absolute bolometric magnitude scale where Mbol = 0 corresponds to luminosity L0 = 3.0128×1028 W, with the zero point luminosity L0 set such that the Sun (with nominal luminosity 3.828×1026 W) corresponds to absolute bolometric magnitude Mbol,⊙ = 4.74. Placing a radiation source (e.g. star) at the standard distance of 10 parsecs, it follows that the zero point of the apparent bolometric magnitude scale mbol = 0 corresponds to irradiance f0 = 2.518021002×10−8 W/m2. Using the IAU 2015 scale, the nominal total solar irradiance ("solar constant") measured at 1 astronomical unit (1361 W/m2) corresponds to an apparent bolometric magnitude of the Sun of mbol,⊙ = −26.832.[10]

Following Resolution B2, the relation between a star's absolute bolometric magnitude and its luminosity is no longer directly tied to the Sun's (variable) luminosity:

 
where
  • L is the star's luminosity (bolometric luminosity) in watts
  • L0 is the zero point luminosity 3.0128×1028 W
  • Mbol is the bolometric magnitude of the star

The new IAU absolute magnitude scale permanently disconnects the scale from the variable Sun. However, on this SI power scale, the nominal solar luminosity corresponds closely to Mbol = 4.74, a value that was commonly adopted by astronomers before the 2015 IAU resolution.[10]

The luminosity of the star in watts can be calculated as a function of its absolute bolometric magnitude Mbol as:

 
using the variables as defined previously.

Solar System bodies (H)

Abs Mag (H)
and Diameter
for asteroids
(albedo=0.14)[11]
H Diameter
10 36 km
12.7 10 km
15 3.6 km
17.7 1 km
19.2 510 m
20 360 m
22 140 m
22.7 100 m
24.2 51 m
25 36 m
26.6 17 m
27.7 10 m
30 3.6 m
32.7 1 m

For planets and asteroids, a definition of absolute magnitude that is more meaningful for non-stellar objects is used. The absolute magnitude, commonly called  , is defined as the apparent magnitude that the object would have if it were one astronomical unit (AU) from both the Sun and the observer, and in conditions of ideal solar opposition (an arrangement that is impossible in practice).[12] Because Solar System bodies are illuminated by the Sun, their brightness varies as a function of illumination conditions, described by the phase angle. This relationship is referred to as the phase curve. The absolute magnitude is the brightness at phase angle zero, an arrangement known as opposition, from a distance of one AU.

Apparent magnitude

 
The phase angle   can be calculated from the distances body-sun, observer-sun and observer-body, using the law of cosines.

The absolute magnitude   can be used to calculate the apparent magnitude   of a body. For an object reflecting sunlight,   and   are connected by the relation

 
where   is the phase angle, the angle between the body-Sun and body–observer lines.   is the phase integral (the integration of reflected light; a number in the 0 to 1 range).[13]

By the law of cosines, we have:

 

Distances:

  • dBO is the distance between the body and the observer
  • dBS is the distance between the body and the Sun
  • dOS is the distance between the observer and the Sun
  • d0, a unit conversion factor, is the constant 1 AU, the average distance between the Earth and the Sun

Approximations for phase integral q(α)

The value of   depends on the properties of the reflecting surface, in particular on its roughness. In practice, different approximations are used based on the known or assumed properties of the surface. The surfaces of terrestrial planets are generally more difficult to model than those of gaseous planets, the latter of which have smoother visible surfaces.[13]

Planets as diffuse spheres

 
Diffuse reflection on sphere and flat disk
 
Brightness with phase for diffuse reflection models. The sphere is 2/3 as bright at zero phase, while the disk can't be seen beyond 90 degrees.

Planetary bodies can be approximated reasonably well as ideal diffuse reflecting spheres. Let   be the phase angle in degrees, then[14]

 
A full-phase diffuse sphere reflects two-thirds as much light as a diffuse flat disk of the same diameter. A quarter phase ( ) has   as much light as full phase ( ).

By contrast, a diffuse disk reflector model is simply  , which isn't realistic, but it does represent the opposition surge for rough surfaces that reflect more uniform light back at low phase angles.

The definition of the geometric albedo  , a measure for the reflectivity of planetary surfaces, is based on the diffuse disk reflector model. The absolute magnitude  , diameter   (in kilometers) and geometric albedo   of a body are related by[15][16][17]

 

Example: The Moon's absolute magnitude   can be calculated from its diameter   and geometric albedo  :[18]

 
We have  ,   At quarter phase,   (according to the diffuse reflector model), this yields an apparent magnitude of   The actual value is somewhat lower than that,   The phase curve of the Moon is too complicated for the diffuse reflector model.[19] A more accurate formula is given in the following section.

More advanced models

Because Solar System bodies are never perfect diffuse reflectors, astronomers use different models to predict apparent magnitudes based on known or assumed properties of the body.[13] For planets, approximations for the correction term   in the formula for m have been derived empirically, to match observations at different phase angles. The approximations recommended by the Astronomical Almanac[20] are (with   in degrees):

Planet   Approximation for  
Mercury −0.613  
Venus −4.384
  •   (for  )
  •   (for  )
Earth −3.99  
Moon[21] +0.28
  •   (for  , before full Moon)
  •   (for  , after full Moon)
Mars −1.601
  •   (for  )
  •   (for  )
Jupiter −9.395
  •   (for  )
  •   (for  )
Saturn −8.914
  •   (for planet and rings,   and  )
  •   (for the globe alone,  )
  •   (for the globe alone,  )
Uranus −7.110   (for  )
Neptune −7.00   (for   and  )
The different halves of the Moon, as seen from Earth
 
Moon at first quarter
 
Moon at last quarter

Here   is the effective inclination of Saturn's rings (their tilt relative to the observer), which as seen from Earth varies between 0° and 27° over the course of one Saturn orbit, and   is a small correction term depending on Uranus' sub-Earth and sub-solar latitudes.   is the Common Era year. Neptune's absolute magnitude is changing slowly due to seasonal effects as the planet moves along its 165-year orbit around the Sun, and the approximation above is only valid after the year 2000. For some circumstances, like   for Venus, no observations are available, and the phase curve is unknown in those cases. The formula for the Moon is only applicable to the near side of the Moon, the portion that is visible from the Earth.

Example 1: On 1 January 2019, Venus was   from the Sun, and   from Earth, at a phase angle of   (near quarter phase). Under full-phase conditions, Venus would have been visible at   Accounting for the high phase angle, the correction term above yields an actual apparent magnitude of   This is close to the value of   predicted by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.[22]

Example 2: At first quarter phase, the approximation for the Moon gives   With that, the apparent magnitude of the Moon is   close to the expected value of about  . At last quarter, the Moon is about 0.06 mag fainter than at first quarter, because that part of its surface has a lower albedo.

Earth's albedo varies by a factor of 6, from 0.12 in the cloud-free case to 0.76 in the case of altostratus cloud. The absolute magnitude in the table corresponds to an albedo of 0.434. Due to the variability of the weather, Earth's apparent magnitude cannot be predicted as accurately as that of most other planets.[20]

Asteroids

 
Asteroid 1 Ceres, imaged by the Dawn spacecraft at phase angles of 0°, 7° and 33°. The strong difference in brightness between the three is real. The left image at 0° phase angle shows the brightness surge due to the opposition effect.
 
Phase integrals for various values of G
 
Relation between the slope parameter   and the opposition surge. Larger values of   correspond to a less pronounced opposition effect. For most asteroids, a value of   is assumed, corresponding to an opposition surge of  .

If an object has an atmosphere, it reflects light more or less isotropically in all directions, and its brightness can be modelled as a diffuse reflector. Bodies with no atmosphere, like asteroids or moons, tend to reflect light more strongly to the direction of the incident light, and their brightness increases rapidly as the phase angle approaches  . This rapid brightening near opposition is called the opposition effect. Its strength depends on the physical properties of the body's surface, and hence it differs from asteroid to asteroid.[13]

In 1985, the IAU adopted the semi-empirical  -system, based on two parameters   and   called absolute magnitude and slope, to model the opposition effect for the ephemerides published by the Minor Planet Center.[23]

 

where

  • the phase integral is   and
  •   for   or  ,  ,  ,   and  .[24]

This relation is valid for phase angles  , and works best when  .[25]

The slope parameter   relates to the surge in brightness, typically 0.3 mag, when the object is near opposition. It is known accurately only for a small number of asteroids, hence for most asteroids a value of   is assumed.[25] In rare cases,   can be negative.[24][26] An example is 101955 Bennu, with  .[27]

In 2012, the  -system was officially replaced by an improved system with three parameters  ,   and  , which produces more satisfactory results if the opposition effect is very small or restricted to very small phase angles. However, as of 2022, this  -system has not been adopted by either the Minor Planet Center nor Jet Propulsion Laboratory.[13][28]

The apparent magnitude of asteroids varies as they rotate, on time scales of seconds to weeks depending on their rotation period, by up to   or more.[29] In addition, their absolute magnitude can vary with the viewing direction, depending on their axial tilt. In many cases, neither the rotation period nor the axial tilt are known, limiting the predictability. The models presented here do not capture those effects.[25][13]

Cometary magnitudes

The brightness of comets is given separately as total magnitude ( , the brightness integrated over the entire visible extend of the coma) and nuclear magnitude ( , the brightness of the core region alone).[30] Both are different scales than the magnitude scale used for planets and asteroids, and can not be used for a size comparison with an asteroid's absolute magnitude H.

The activity of comets varies with their distance from the Sun. Their brightness can be approximated as

 
 
where   are the total and nuclear apparent magnitudes of the comet, respectively,   are its "absolute" total and nuclear magnitudes,   and   are the body-sun and body-observer distances,   is the Astronomical Unit, and   are the slope parameters characterising the comet's activity. For  , this reduces to the formula for a purely reflecting body (showing no cometary activity).[31]

For example, the lightcurve of comet C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS) can be approximated by  [32] On the day of its perihelion passage, 10 March 2013, comet PANSTARRS was   from the Sun and   from Earth. The total apparent magnitude   is predicted to have been   at that time. The Minor Planet Center gives a value close to that,  .[33]

Absolute magnitudes and sizes of comet nuclei
Comet Absolute
magnitude  [34]
Nucleus
diameter
Comet Sarabat −3.0 ≈100 km?
Comet Hale-Bopp −1.3 60 ± 20 km
Comet Halley 4.0 14.9 x 8.2 km
average new comet 6.5 ≈2 km[35]
C/2014 UN271 (Bernardinelli-Bernstein) 6.7[36] 60–200 km?[37][38]
289P/Blanpain (during 1819 outburst) 8.5[39] 320 m[40]
289P/Blanpain (normal activity) 22.9[41] 320 m

The absolute magnitude of any given comet can vary dramatically. It can change as the comet becomes more or less active over time or if it undergoes an outburst. This makes it difficult to use the absolute magnitude for a size estimate. When comet 289P/Blanpain was discovered in 1819, its absolute magnitude was estimated as  .[39] It was subsequently lost and was only rediscovered in 2003. At that time, its absolute magnitude had decreased to  ,[41] and it was realised that the 1819 apparition coincided with an outburst. 289P/Blanpain reached naked eye brightness (5–8 mag) in 1819, even though it is the comet with the smallest nucleus that has ever been physically characterised, and usually doesn't become brighter than 18 mag.[39][40]

For some comets that have been observed at heliocentric distances large enough to distinguish between light reflected from the coma, and light from the nucleus itself, an absolute magnitude analogous to that used for asteroids has been calculated, allowing to estimate the sizes of their nuclei.[42]

Meteors

For a meteor, the standard distance for measurement of magnitudes is at an altitude of 100 km (62 mi) at the observer's zenith.[43][44]

See also

References

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External links

  • Reference zero-magnitude fluxes 22 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine
  • International Astronomical Union
  • Absolute Magnitude of a Star calculator
  • The Magnitude system
  • About stellar magnitudes
  • Obtain the magnitude of any star – SIMBAD
  • Converting magnitude of minor planets to diameter

absolute, magnitude, this, article, about, brightness, stars, science, fiction, magazine, absolute, magnitude, magazine, measure, luminosity, celestial, object, inverse, logarithmic, astronomical, magnitude, scale, object, absolute, magnitude, defined, equal, . This article is about the brightness of stars For the science fiction magazine see Absolute Magnitude magazine Absolute magnitude M is a measure of the luminosity of a celestial object on an inverse logarithmic astronomical magnitude scale An object s absolute magnitude is defined to be equal to the apparent magnitude that the object would have if it were viewed from a distance of exactly 10 parsecs 32 6 light years without extinction or dimming of its light due to absorption by interstellar matter and cosmic dust By hypothetically placing all objects at a standard reference distance from the observer their luminosities can be directly compared among each other on a magnitude scale As with all astronomical magnitudes the absolute magnitude can be specified for different wavelength ranges corresponding to specified filter bands or passbands for stars a commonly quoted absolute magnitude is the absolute visual magnitude which uses the visual V band of the spectrum in the UBV photometric system Absolute magnitudes are denoted by a capital M with a subscript representing the filter band used for measurement such as MV for absolute magnitude in the V band The more luminous an object the smaller the numerical value of its absolute magnitude A difference of 5 magnitudes between the absolute magnitudes of two objects corresponds to a ratio of 100 in their luminosities and a difference of n magnitudes in absolute magnitude corresponds to a luminosity ratio of 100n 5 For example a star of absolute magnitude MV 3 0 would be 100 times as luminous as a star of absolute magnitude MV 8 0 as measured in the V filter band The Sun has absolute magnitude MV 4 83 1 Highly luminous objects can have negative absolute magnitudes for example the Milky Way galaxy has an absolute B magnitude of about 20 8 2 An object s absolute bolometric magnitude Mbol represents its total luminosity over all wavelengths rather than in a single filter band as expressed on a logarithmic magnitude scale To convert from an absolute magnitude in a specific filter band to absolute bolometric magnitude a bolometric correction BC is applied 3 For Solar System bodies that shine in reflected light a different definition of absolute magnitude H is used based on a standard reference distance of one astronomical unit Contents 1 Stars and galaxies 1 1 Apparent magnitude 1 1 1 Examples 1 2 Bolometric magnitude 2 Solar System bodies H 2 1 Apparent magnitude 2 2 Approximations for phase integral q a 2 2 1 Planets as diffuse spheres 2 2 2 More advanced models 2 2 3 Asteroids 2 3 Cometary magnitudes 3 Meteors 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksStars and galaxies EditIn stellar and galactic astronomy the standard distance is 10 parsecs about 32 616 light years 308 57 petameters or 308 57 trillion kilometres A star at 10 parsecs has a parallax of 0 1 100 milliarcseconds Galaxies and other extended objects are much larger than 10 parsecs their light is radiated over an extended patch of sky and their overall brightness cannot be directly observed from relatively short distances but the same convention is used A galaxy s magnitude is defined by measuring all the light radiated over the entire object treating that integrated brightness as the brightness of a single point like or star like source and computing the magnitude of that point like source as it would appear if observed at the standard 10 parsecs distance Consequently the absolute magnitude of any object equals the apparent magnitude it would have if it were 10 parsecs away Some stars visible to the naked eye have such a low absolute magnitude that they would appear bright enough to outshine the planets and cast shadows if they were at 10 parsecs from the Earth Examples include Rigel 7 0 Deneb 7 2 Naos 6 0 and Betelgeuse 5 6 For comparison Sirius has an absolute magnitude of only 1 4 which is still brighter than the Sun whose absolute visual magnitude is 4 83 The Sun s absolute bolometric magnitude is set arbitrarily usually at 4 75 4 5 Absolute magnitudes of stars generally range from approximately 10 to 20 The absolute magnitudes of galaxies can be much lower brighter For example the giant elliptical galaxy M87 has an absolute magnitude of 22 i e as bright as about 60 000 stars of magnitude 10 Some active galactic nuclei quasars like CTA 102 can reach absolute magnitudes in excess of 32 making them the most luminous persistent objects in the observable universe although these objects can vary in brightness over astronomically short timescales At the extreme end the optical afterglow of the gamma ray burst GRB 080319B reached according to one paper an absolute r magnitude brighter than 38 for a few tens of seconds 6 Apparent magnitude Edit Main article Apparent magnitude The Greek astronomer Hipparchus established a numerical scale to describe the brightness of each star appearing in the sky The brightest stars in the sky were assigned an apparent magnitude m 1 and the dimmest stars visible to the naked eye are assigned m 6 7 The difference between them corresponds to a factor of 100 in brightness For objects within the immediate neighborhood of the Sun the absolute magnitude M and apparent magnitude m from any distance d in parsecs with 1 pc 3 2616 light years are related by100 m M 5 F 10 F d 10 p c 2 displaystyle 100 frac m M 5 frac F 10 F left frac d 10 mathrm pc right 2 where F is the radiant flux measured at distance d in parsecs F10 the radiant flux measured at distance 10 pc Using the common logarithm the equation can be written as M m 5 log 10 d pc 5 m 5 log 10 d pc 1 displaystyle M m 5 log 10 d text pc 5 m 5 left log 10 d text pc 1 right where it is assumed that extinction from gas and dust is negligible Typical extinction rates within the Milky Way galaxy are 1 to 2 magnitudes per kiloparsec when dark clouds are taken into account 8 For objects at very large distances outside the Milky Way the luminosity distance dL distance defined using luminosity measurements must be used instead of d because the Euclidean approximation is invalid for distant objects Instead general relativity must be taken into account Moreover the cosmological redshift complicates the relationship between absolute and apparent magnitude because the radiation observed was shifted into the red range of the spectrum To compare the magnitudes of very distant objects with those of local objects a K correction might have to be applied to the magnitudes of the distant objects The absolute magnitude M can also be written in terms of the apparent magnitude m and stellar parallax p M m 5 log 10 p 1 displaystyle M m 5 left log 10 p 1 right or using apparent magnitude m and distance modulus m M m m displaystyle M m mu Examples Edit Rigel has a visual magnitude mV of 0 12 and distance of about 860 light years M V 0 12 5 log 10 860 3 2616 1 7 0 displaystyle M mathrm V 0 12 5 left log 10 frac 860 3 2616 1 right 7 0 Vega has a parallax p of 0 129 and an apparent magnitude mV of 0 03 M V 0 03 5 log 10 0 129 1 0 6 displaystyle M mathrm V 0 03 5 left log 10 0 129 1 right 0 6 The Black Eye Galaxy has a visual magnitude mV of 9 36 and a distance modulus m of 31 06 M V 9 36 31 06 21 7 displaystyle M mathrm V 9 36 31 06 21 7 Bolometric magnitude Edit The bolometric absolute magnitude Mbol takes into account electromagnetic radiation at all wavelengths It includes those unobserved due to instrumental passband the Earth s atmospheric absorption and extinction by interstellar dust It is defined based on the luminosity of the stars In the case of stars with few observations it must be computed assuming an effective temperature Classically the difference in bolometric magnitude is related to the luminosity ratio according to 7 M b o l M b o l 2 5 log 10 L L displaystyle M mathrm bol star M mathrm bol odot 2 5 log 10 left frac L star L odot right which makes by inversion L L 10 0 4 M b o l M b o l displaystyle frac L star L odot 10 0 4 left M mathrm bol odot M mathrm bol star right where L is the Sun s luminosity bolometric luminosity L is the star s luminosity bolometric luminosity Mbol is the bolometric magnitude of the Sun Mbol is the bolometric magnitude of the star In August 2015 the International Astronomical Union passed Resolution B2 9 defining the zero points of the absolute and apparent bolometric magnitude scales in SI units for power watts and irradiance W m2 respectively Although bolometric magnitudes had been used by astronomers for many decades there had been systematic differences in the absolute magnitude luminosity scales presented in various astronomical references and no international standardization This led to systematic differences in bolometric corrections scales 10 Combined with incorrect assumed absolute bolometric magnitudes for the Sun this could lead to systematic errors in estimated stellar luminosities and other stellar properties such as radii or ages which rely on stellar luminosity to be calculated Resolution B2 defines an absolute bolometric magnitude scale where Mbol 0 corresponds to luminosity L0 3 0128 1028 W with the zero point luminosity L0 set such that the Sun with nominal luminosity 3 828 1026 W corresponds to absolute bolometric magnitude Mbol 4 74 Placing a radiation source e g star at the standard distance of 10 parsecs it follows that the zero point of the apparent bolometric magnitude scale mbol 0 corresponds to irradiance f0 2 518021 002 10 8 W m2 Using the IAU 2015 scale the nominal total solar irradiance solar constant measured at 1 astronomical unit 1361 W m2 corresponds to an apparent bolometric magnitude of the Sun of mbol 26 832 10 Following Resolution B2 the relation between a star s absolute bolometric magnitude and its luminosity is no longer directly tied to the Sun s variable luminosity M b o l 2 5 log 10 L L 0 2 5 log 10 L 71 197425 displaystyle M mathrm bol 2 5 log 10 frac L star L 0 approx 2 5 log 10 L star 71 197425 where L is the star s luminosity bolometric luminosity in watts L0 is the zero point luminosity 3 0128 1028 W Mbol is the bolometric magnitude of the starThe new IAU absolute magnitude scale permanently disconnects the scale from the variable Sun However on this SI power scale the nominal solar luminosity corresponds closely to Mbol 4 74 a value that was commonly adopted by astronomers before the 2015 IAU resolution 10 The luminosity of the star in watts can be calculated as a function of its absolute bolometric magnitude Mbol as L L 0 10 0 4 M b o l displaystyle L star L 0 10 0 4M mathrm bol using the variables as defined previously Solar System bodies H EditFor an introduction see Magnitude astronomy Abs Mag H and Diameterfor asteroids albedo 0 14 11 H Diameter10 36 km12 7 10 km15 3 6 km17 7 1 km19 2 510 m20 360 m22 140 m22 7 100 m24 2 51 m25 36 m26 6 17 m27 7 10 m30 3 6 m32 7 1 mFor planets and asteroids a definition of absolute magnitude that is more meaningful for non stellar objects is used The absolute magnitude commonly called H displaystyle H is defined as the apparent magnitude that the object would have if it were one astronomical unit AU from both the Sun and the observer and in conditions of ideal solar opposition an arrangement that is impossible in practice 12 Because Solar System bodies are illuminated by the Sun their brightness varies as a function of illumination conditions described by the phase angle This relationship is referred to as the phase curve The absolute magnitude is the brightness at phase angle zero an arrangement known as opposition from a distance of one AU Apparent magnitude Edit The phase angle a displaystyle alpha can be calculated from the distances body sun observer sun and observer body using the law of cosines The absolute magnitude H displaystyle H can be used to calculate the apparent magnitude m displaystyle m of a body For an object reflecting sunlight H displaystyle H and m displaystyle m are connected by the relationm H 5 log 10 d B S d B O d 0 2 2 5 log 10 q a displaystyle m H 5 log 10 left frac d BS d BO d 0 2 right 2 5 log 10 q alpha where a displaystyle alpha is the phase angle the angle between the body Sun and body observer lines q a displaystyle q alpha is the phase integral the integration of reflected light a number in the 0 to 1 range 13 By the law of cosines we have cos a d B O 2 d B S 2 d O S 2 2 d B O d B S displaystyle cos alpha frac d mathrm BO 2 d mathrm BS 2 d mathrm OS 2 2d mathrm BO d mathrm BS Distances dBO is the distance between the body and the observer dBS is the distance between the body and the Sun dOS is the distance between the observer and the Sun d0 a unit conversion factor is the constant 1 AU the average distance between the Earth and the SunApproximations for phase integral q a Edit The value of q a displaystyle q alpha depends on the properties of the reflecting surface in particular on its roughness In practice different approximations are used based on the known or assumed properties of the surface The surfaces of terrestrial planets are generally more difficult to model than those of gaseous planets the latter of which have smoother visible surfaces 13 Planets as diffuse spheres Edit Diffuse reflection on sphere and flat disk Brightness with phase for diffuse reflection models The sphere is 2 3 as bright at zero phase while the disk can t be seen beyond 90 degrees Planetary bodies can be approximated reasonably well as ideal diffuse reflecting spheres Let a displaystyle alpha be the phase angle in degrees then 14 q a 2 3 1 a 180 cos a 1 p sin a displaystyle q alpha frac 2 3 left left 1 frac alpha 180 circ right cos alpha frac 1 pi sin alpha right A full phase diffuse sphere reflects two thirds as much light as a diffuse flat disk of the same diameter A quarter phase a 90 displaystyle alpha 90 circ has 1 p textstyle frac 1 pi as much light as full phase a 0 displaystyle alpha 0 circ By contrast a diffuse disk reflector model is simply q a cos a displaystyle q alpha cos alpha which isn t realistic but it does represent the opposition surge for rough surfaces that reflect more uniform light back at low phase angles The definition of the geometric albedo p displaystyle p a measure for the reflectivity of planetary surfaces is based on the diffuse disk reflector model The absolute magnitude H displaystyle H diameter D displaystyle D in kilometers and geometric albedo p displaystyle p of a body are related by 15 16 17 D 1329 p 10 0 2 H k m displaystyle D frac 1329 sqrt p times 10 0 2H mathrm km Example The Moon s absolute magnitude H displaystyle H can be calculated from its diameter D 3474 km displaystyle D 3474 text km and geometric albedo p 0 113 displaystyle p 0 113 18 H 5 log 10 1329 3474 0 113 0 28 displaystyle H 5 log 10 frac 1329 3474 sqrt 0 113 0 28 We have d B S 1 AU displaystyle d BS 1 text AU d B O 384400 km 0 00257 AU displaystyle d BO 384400 text km 0 00257 text AU At quarter phase q a 2 3 p textstyle q alpha approx frac 2 3 pi according to the diffuse reflector model this yields an apparent magnitude of m 0 28 5 log 10 1 0 00257 2 5 log 10 2 3 p 10 99 textstyle m 0 28 5 log 10 left 1 cdot 0 00257 right 2 5 log 10 left frac 2 3 pi right 10 99 The actual value is somewhat lower than that m 10 0 displaystyle m 10 0 The phase curve of the Moon is too complicated for the diffuse reflector model 19 A more accurate formula is given in the following section More advanced models Edit Because Solar System bodies are never perfect diffuse reflectors astronomers use different models to predict apparent magnitudes based on known or assumed properties of the body 13 For planets approximations for the correction term 2 5 log 10 q a displaystyle 2 5 log 10 q alpha in the formula for m have been derived empirically to match observations at different phase angles The approximations recommended by the Astronomical Almanac 20 are with a displaystyle alpha in degrees Planet H displaystyle H Approximation for 2 5 log 10 q a displaystyle 2 5 log 10 q alpha Mercury 0 613 6 328 10 2 a 1 6336 10 3 a 2 3 3644 10 5 a 3 3 4265 10 7 a 4 1 6893 10 9 a 5 3 0334 10 12 a 6 displaystyle 6 328 times 10 2 alpha 1 6336 times 10 3 alpha 2 3 3644 times 10 5 alpha 3 3 4265 times 10 7 alpha 4 1 6893 times 10 9 alpha 5 3 0334 times 10 12 alpha 6 Venus 4 384 1 044 10 3 a 3 687 10 4 a 2 2 814 10 6 a 3 8 938 10 9 a 4 displaystyle 1 044 times 10 3 alpha 3 687 times 10 4 alpha 2 2 814 times 10 6 alpha 3 8 938 times 10 9 alpha 4 for 0 lt a 163 7 displaystyle 0 circ lt alpha leq 163 7 circ 240 44228 2 81914 a 8 39034 10 3 a 2 displaystyle 240 44228 2 81914 alpha 8 39034 times 10 3 alpha 2 for 163 7 lt a lt 179 displaystyle 163 7 circ lt alpha lt 179 circ Earth 3 99 1 060 10 3 a 2 054 10 4 a 2 displaystyle 1 060 times 10 3 alpha 2 054 times 10 4 alpha 2 Moon 21 0 28 2 9994 10 2 a 1 6057 10 4 a 2 3 1543 10 6 a 3 2 0667 10 8 a 4 6 2553 10 11 a 5 displaystyle 2 9994 times 10 2 alpha 1 6057 times 10 4 alpha 2 3 1543 times 10 6 alpha 3 2 0667 times 10 8 alpha 4 6 2553 times 10 11 alpha 5 for a 150 displaystyle alpha leq 150 circ before full Moon 3 3234 10 2 a 3 0725 10 4 a 2 6 1575 10 6 a 3 4 7723 10 8 a 4 1 4681 10 10 a 5 displaystyle 3 3234 times 10 2 alpha 3 0725 times 10 4 alpha 2 6 1575 times 10 6 alpha 3 4 7723 times 10 8 alpha 4 1 4681 times 10 10 alpha 5 for a 150 displaystyle alpha leq 150 circ after full Moon Mars 1 601 2 267 10 2 a 1 302 10 4 a 2 displaystyle 2 267 times 10 2 alpha 1 302 times 10 4 alpha 2 for 0 lt a 50 displaystyle 0 circ lt alpha leq 50 circ 1 234 2 573 10 2 a 3 445 10 4 a 2 displaystyle 1 234 2 573 times 10 2 alpha 3 445 times 10 4 alpha 2 for 50 lt a 120 displaystyle 50 circ lt alpha leq 120 circ Jupiter 9 395 3 7 10 4 a 6 16 10 4 a 2 displaystyle 3 7 times 10 4 alpha 6 16 times 10 4 alpha 2 for a 12 displaystyle alpha leq 12 circ 0 033 2 5 log 10 1 1 507 a 180 0 363 a 180 2 0 062 a 180 3 2 809 a 180 4 1 876 a 180 5 displaystyle 0 033 2 5 log 10 left 1 1 507 left frac alpha 180 circ right 0 363 left frac alpha 180 circ right 2 0 062 left frac alpha 180 circ right 3 2 809 left frac alpha 180 circ right 4 1 876 left frac alpha 180 circ right 5 right for a gt 12 displaystyle alpha gt 12 circ Saturn 8 914 1 825 sin b 2 6 10 2 a 0 378 sin b e 2 25 a displaystyle 1 825 sin left beta right 2 6 times 10 2 alpha 0 378 sin left beta right e 2 25 alpha for planet and rings a lt 6 5 displaystyle alpha lt 6 5 circ and b lt 27 displaystyle beta lt 27 circ 0 036 3 7 10 4 a 6 16 10 4 a 2 displaystyle 0 036 3 7 times 10 4 alpha 6 16 times 10 4 alpha 2 for the globe alone a 6 displaystyle alpha leq 6 circ 0 026 2 446 10 4 a 2 672 10 4 a 2 1 505 10 6 a 3 4 767 10 9 a 4 displaystyle 0 026 2 446 times 10 4 alpha 2 672 times 10 4 alpha 2 1 505 times 10 6 alpha 3 4 767 times 10 9 alpha 4 for the globe alone 6 lt a lt 150 displaystyle 6 circ lt alpha lt 150 circ Uranus 7 110 8 4 10 4 ϕ 6 587 10 3 a 1 045 10 4 a 2 displaystyle 8 4 times 10 4 phi 6 587 times 10 3 alpha 1 045 times 10 4 alpha 2 for a lt 3 1 displaystyle alpha lt 3 1 circ Neptune 7 00 7 944 10 3 a 9 617 10 5 a 2 displaystyle 7 944 times 10 3 alpha 9 617 times 10 5 alpha 2 for a lt 133 displaystyle alpha lt 133 circ and t gt 2000 0 displaystyle t gt 2000 0 The different halves of the Moon as seen from Earth Moon at first quarter Moon at last quarter Here b displaystyle beta is the effective inclination of Saturn s rings their tilt relative to the observer which as seen from Earth varies between 0 and 27 over the course of one Saturn orbit and ϕ displaystyle phi is a small correction term depending on Uranus sub Earth and sub solar latitudes t displaystyle t is the Common Era year Neptune s absolute magnitude is changing slowly due to seasonal effects as the planet moves along its 165 year orbit around the Sun and the approximation above is only valid after the year 2000 For some circumstances like a 179 displaystyle alpha geq 179 circ for Venus no observations are available and the phase curve is unknown in those cases The formula for the Moon is only applicable to the near side of the Moon the portion that is visible from the Earth Example 1 On 1 January 2019 Venus was d B S 0 719 AU displaystyle d BS 0 719 text AU from the Sun and d B O 0 645 AU displaystyle d BO 0 645 text AU from Earth at a phase angle of a 93 0 displaystyle alpha 93 0 circ near quarter phase Under full phase conditions Venus would have been visible at m 4 384 5 log 10 0 719 0 645 6 09 displaystyle m 4 384 5 log 10 left 0 719 cdot 0 645 right 6 09 Accounting for the high phase angle the correction term above yields an actual apparent magnitude of m 6 09 1 044 10 3 93 0 3 687 10 4 93 0 2 2 814 10 6 93 0 3 8 938 10 9 93 0 4 4 59 displaystyle m 6 09 left 1 044 times 10 3 cdot 93 0 3 687 times 10 4 cdot 93 0 2 2 814 times 10 6 cdot 93 0 3 8 938 times 10 9 cdot 93 0 4 right 4 59 This is close to the value of m 4 62 displaystyle m 4 62 predicted by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory 22 Example 2 At first quarter phase the approximation for the Moon gives 2 5 log 10 q 90 2 71 textstyle 2 5 log 10 q 90 circ 2 71 With that the apparent magnitude of the Moon is m 0 28 5 log 10 1 0 00257 2 71 9 96 textstyle m 0 28 5 log 10 left 1 cdot 0 00257 right 2 71 9 96 close to the expected value of about 10 0 displaystyle 10 0 At last quarter the Moon is about 0 06 mag fainter than at first quarter because that part of its surface has a lower albedo Earth s albedo varies by a factor of 6 from 0 12 in the cloud free case to 0 76 in the case of altostratus cloud The absolute magnitude in the table corresponds to an albedo of 0 434 Due to the variability of the weather Earth s apparent magnitude cannot be predicted as accurately as that of most other planets 20 Asteroids Edit Asteroid 1 Ceres imaged by the Dawn spacecraft at phase angles of 0 7 and 33 The strong difference in brightness between the three is real The left image at 0 phase angle shows the brightness surge due to the opposition effect Phase integrals for various values of G Relation between the slope parameter G displaystyle G and the opposition surge Larger values of G displaystyle G correspond to a less pronounced opposition effect For most asteroids a value of G 0 15 displaystyle G 0 15 is assumed corresponding to an opposition surge of 0 3 mag displaystyle 0 3 text mag If an object has an atmosphere it reflects light more or less isotropically in all directions and its brightness can be modelled as a diffuse reflector Bodies with no atmosphere like asteroids or moons tend to reflect light more strongly to the direction of the incident light and their brightness increases rapidly as the phase angle approaches 0 displaystyle 0 circ This rapid brightening near opposition is called the opposition effect Its strength depends on the physical properties of the body s surface and hence it differs from asteroid to asteroid 13 In 1985 the IAU adopted the semi empirical H G displaystyle HG system based on two parameters H displaystyle H and G displaystyle G called absolute magnitude and slope to model the opposition effect for the ephemerides published by the Minor Planet Center 23 m H 5 log 10 d B S d B O d 0 2 2 5 log 10 q a displaystyle m H 5 log 10 left frac d BS d BO d 0 2 right 2 5 log 10 q alpha where the phase integral is q a 1 G ϕ 1 a G ϕ 2 a displaystyle q alpha left 1 G right phi 1 left alpha right G phi 2 left alpha right and ϕ i a exp A i tan a 2 B i textstyle phi i left alpha right exp left A i left tan frac alpha 2 right B i right for i 1 displaystyle i 1 or 2 displaystyle 2 A 1 3 332 displaystyle A 1 3 332 A 2 1 862 displaystyle A 2 1 862 B 1 0 631 displaystyle B 1 0 631 and B 2 1 218 displaystyle B 2 1 218 24 This relation is valid for phase angles a lt 120 displaystyle alpha lt 120 circ and works best when a lt 20 displaystyle alpha lt 20 circ 25 The slope parameter G displaystyle G relates to the surge in brightness typically 0 3 mag when the object is near opposition It is known accurately only for a small number of asteroids hence for most asteroids a value of G 0 15 displaystyle G 0 15 is assumed 25 In rare cases G displaystyle G can be negative 24 26 An example is 101955 Bennu with G 0 08 displaystyle G 0 08 27 In 2012 the H G displaystyle HG system was officially replaced by an improved system with three parameters H displaystyle H G 1 displaystyle G 1 and G 2 displaystyle G 2 which produces more satisfactory results if the opposition effect is very small or restricted to very small phase angles However as of 2022 this H G 1 G 2 displaystyle HG 1 G 2 system has not been adopted by either the Minor Planet Center nor Jet Propulsion Laboratory 13 28 The apparent magnitude of asteroids varies as they rotate on time scales of seconds to weeks depending on their rotation period by up to 2 mag displaystyle 2 text mag or more 29 In addition their absolute magnitude can vary with the viewing direction depending on their axial tilt In many cases neither the rotation period nor the axial tilt are known limiting the predictability The models presented here do not capture those effects 25 13 Cometary magnitudes Edit The brightness of comets is given separately as total magnitude m 1 displaystyle m 1 the brightness integrated over the entire visible extend of the coma and nuclear magnitude m 2 displaystyle m 2 the brightness of the core region alone 30 Both are different scales than the magnitude scale used for planets and asteroids and can not be used for a size comparison with an asteroid s absolute magnitude H The activity of comets varies with their distance from the Sun Their brightness can be approximated asm 1 M 1 2 5 K 1 log 10 d B S d 0 5 log 10 d B O d 0 displaystyle m 1 M 1 2 5 cdot K 1 log 10 left frac d BS d 0 right 5 log 10 left frac d BO d 0 right m 2 M 2 2 5 K 2 log 10 d B S d 0 5 log 10 d B O d 0 displaystyle m 2 M 2 2 5 cdot K 2 log 10 left frac d BS d 0 right 5 log 10 left frac d BO d 0 right where m 1 2 displaystyle m 1 2 are the total and nuclear apparent magnitudes of the comet respectively M 1 2 displaystyle M 1 2 are its absolute total and nuclear magnitudes d B S displaystyle d BS and d B O displaystyle d BO are the body sun and body observer distances d 0 displaystyle d 0 is the Astronomical Unit and K 1 2 displaystyle K 1 2 are the slope parameters characterising the comet s activity For K 2 displaystyle K 2 this reduces to the formula for a purely reflecting body showing no cometary activity 31 For example the lightcurve of comet C 2011 L4 PANSTARRS can be approximated by M 1 5 41 K 1 3 69 displaystyle M 1 5 41 text K 1 3 69 32 On the day of its perihelion passage 10 March 2013 comet PANSTARRS was 0 302 AU displaystyle 0 302 text AU from the Sun and 1 109 AU displaystyle 1 109 text AU from Earth The total apparent magnitude m 1 displaystyle m 1 is predicted to have been m 1 5 41 2 5 3 69 log 10 0 302 5 log 10 1 109 0 8 displaystyle m 1 5 41 2 5 cdot 3 69 cdot log 10 left 0 302 right 5 log 10 left 1 109 right 0 8 at that time The Minor Planet Center gives a value close to that m 1 0 5 displaystyle m 1 0 5 33 Absolute magnitudes and sizes of comet nuclei Comet Absolutemagnitude M 1 displaystyle M 1 34 NucleusdiameterComet Sarabat 3 0 100 km Comet Hale Bopp 1 3 60 20 kmComet Halley 4 0 14 9 x 8 2 kmaverage new comet 6 5 2 km 35 C 2014 UN271 Bernardinelli Bernstein 6 7 36 60 200 km 37 38 289P Blanpain during 1819 outburst 8 5 39 320 m 40 289P Blanpain normal activity 22 9 41 320 mThe absolute magnitude of any given comet can vary dramatically It can change as the comet becomes more or less active over time or if it undergoes an outburst This makes it difficult to use the absolute magnitude for a size estimate When comet 289P Blanpain was discovered in 1819 its absolute magnitude was estimated as M 1 8 5 displaystyle M 1 8 5 39 It was subsequently lost and was only rediscovered in 2003 At that time its absolute magnitude had decreased to M 1 22 9 displaystyle M 1 22 9 41 and it was realised that the 1819 apparition coincided with an outburst 289P Blanpain reached naked eye brightness 5 8 mag in 1819 even though it is the comet with the smallest nucleus that has ever been physically characterised and usually doesn t become brighter than 18 mag 39 40 For some comets that have been observed at heliocentric distances large enough to distinguish between light reflected from the coma and light from the nucleus itself an absolute magnitude analogous to that used for asteroids has been calculated allowing to estimate the sizes of their nuclei 42 Meteors EditFor a meteor the standard distance for measurement of magnitudes is at an altitude of 100 km 62 mi at the observer s zenith 43 44 See also EditAraucaria Project Hertzsprung Russell diagram relates absolute magnitude or luminosity versus spectral color or surface temperature Jansky radio astronomer s preferred unit linear in power unit area List of most luminous stars Photographic magnitude Surface brightness the magnitude for extended objects Zero point photometry the typical calibration 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Star calculator The Magnitude system About stellar magnitudes Obtain the magnitude of any star SIMBAD Converting magnitude of minor planets to diameter Another table for converting asteroid magnitude to estimated diameter Portals Astronomy Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Absolute magnitude amp oldid 1122759161, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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