The apparent magnitude and absolute magnitude of a star are both measures of its brightness, but they refer to different things:
- Apparent Magnitude:
- This measures how bright a star appears from Earth.
- It depends on both the star’s intrinsic brightness (how much light it emits) and its distance from Earth.
- The lower the apparent magnitude, the brighter the star appears (a star with a negative apparent magnitude is brighter than one with a positive magnitude).
- Example: The Sun has an apparent magnitude of -26.7, which is extremely bright when viewed from Earth.
- Absolute Magnitude:
- This measures how bright a star would appear if it were located 10 parsecs (about 32.6 light years) away from Earth.
- It gives a measure of the star’s intrinsic brightness, independent of its distance from us.
- A star’s absolute magnitude allows astronomers to compare the true luminosity of stars.
- The lower the absolute magnitude, the more luminous the star.