Monday, February 6, 2012

The Magnitude Scale

If you've ever listened to a group of amateur or professional astronomers talk, you've probably heard them say something like: "Yeah, I should be able to image that star, it's magnitude 4." But what does magnitude 4 mean? In astronomy, we use a magnitude scale to define how bright stars and other objects are in the sky. To make it super confusing, the magnitude of a source can be a positive or negative value, and larger positive numbers mean the source is dimmer. You can thank Hipparchus for this, he was the first to catalog the brightness of stars, defining magnitude 1 as the brightest stars in the sky and magnitude 6 as the dimmest. Since then, astronomers have come up with equations to calculate the magnitude of stars, so that the system is not based on how good your eyesight is. The magnitude system is defined such that a difference of 5 magnitudes equals 100 times brighter or dimmer. So how much brighter is star A at mag=2 than star B at mag=3? By definition, 1 magnitude difference equals ~2.5 times as bright, so star A is 2.5 times brighter than star B.

 With today's telescopes, we can see stars that are as dim as about mag 30. Without a telescope, our eyes can't see anything dimmer than magnitude 6. The chart below shows you some common sky objects and how bright they appear. Don't forget, the bigger the number the dimmer the object!