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Brightness + Magnitude of Stars - There are approximately 5000 stars viewable with the unaided eye from the Earth’s surface - At any one position you.

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Presentation on theme: "Brightness + Magnitude of Stars - There are approximately 5000 stars viewable with the unaided eye from the Earth’s surface - At any one position you."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Brightness + Magnitude of Stars - There are approximately 5000 stars viewable with the unaided eye from the Earth’s surface - At any one position you could view approximately 300 stars - HOWEVER – Light and air pollution reduces this number significantly - A system of stellar labeling was developed by assigning numbers based on the relative brightness of stars => Magnitude system

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4 1. Magnitude System - original idea came during 2 nd century B.C. from a Greek Scholar named Hipparchus - He organized all the visible stars according to their apparent brightness. The brightest stars were given a magnitude of 1. The Next brightest a magnitude of 2 and so on till the faintest stars were given a magnitude of 6. A. Apparent or Relative Brightness- Amount of light energy striking a surface. (Observer’s eye or telescope). The brightness is a factor of two things: 1. Luminosity of Star- The amount of Light Energy being given off by a star. IT DOES NOT DEPEND ON THE LOCATION OF THE OBSERVER 2. Distance to Star

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6 A. Apparent or Relative Brightness-(cont.) *** As distance to Star Decreases brightness Increases (Inverse Relationship) *** As Luminosity of Star increases brightness Increases (Direct Relationship) B. Apparent Magnitude A number assigned to a celestial object that is a measure of its relative brightness. (Based on Distance and Luminosity) 1. The more positive the number the dimmer the star 2. The more negative the number the brighter the star

7 B. Apparent Magnitude (cont.) It turns out that a an average 1 st magnitude star appears 100 times brighter than a 6 th magnitude star so therefore a change in magnitude of 5 corresponds exactly to a factor of 100 in brightness. *** One change in magnitude corresponds to a fifth root of 100 or 2.5 times in brightness Ex. Magnitude 3 star is 2.5 times brighter than a magnitude 4 star Magnitude 4 star is 2.5 times brighter than a magnitude 5 star Question: 1. How much brighter is a magnitude 2 star than a 4 star? 2. How much dimmer is a magnitude 2 star than a –1 star?

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9 C. Absolute Magnitude- - A star’s magnitude when viewed from a fixed point of 10 parsecs Away (32.6 light years from earth) - A true measure of a star’s luminosity (Since distance is not a factor) - Basically takes all the stars and place them at the same distance from Earth. - Stars closer than 10 parsecs will have a much more positive absolute magnitude (dimmer) than apparent magnitude. Ex. Sun’s Apparent Magnitude -26.8 Sun’s Absolute Magnitude +4.58 (barely visible)

10 Star B is much more luminous than Star A. Both stars have same Apparent magnitude but NOT the same Absolute magnitude


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