October 2017 Discover

(Jeff_L) #1

OUT THERE


66 DISCOVERMAGAZINE.COM

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: NASA/ESA/J. HESTER AND A.LOLL (ASU); NASA/JHUAPL/SWRI; ERNIE MASTROIANNI/DISCOVER; NASA/ESA/J. HESTER

AND A.LOLL (ASU)

optical density that he moved across
the field of view of his eyepiece. He
noted the point where a star would
disappear and could then determine
its brightness.
Around the same time, other
astronomers were developing the
concept of using magnitudes less than
1, but they did leave certain aspects
of the original system intact. For
example, Hipparchus had quantified
the general limiting magnitude of the
human eye as 6th magnitude, and that
rough estimate has endured.

DOING THE MATH
In 1856, another English astronomer,
Norman R. Pogson, realized
that astronomers considered a
1st-magnitude star about 100 times
brighter than a 6th-magnitude one.
He therefore suggested standardizing
that relationship. The ratio between
magnitudes thus became the fifth root
of 100, or 2.5118865, a number now
known as Pogson’s ratio.
Ever since, astronomers recognize
that a star of a certain magnitude is
2.5118865 times brighter than a star
one magnitude fainter. The rest of
us round off to 2.5, which is plenty
accurate. Pogson had defined a
logarithmic scale.
The scale was also convenient
because 19th-century researchers
studying vision thought the eye
sensed differences in brightness on a
logarithmic basis: Our eyes perceive
equal ratios of intensity as equal
intervals of brightness.
Today, we know the eye is not quite
a logarithmic detector. So a 5th-
magnitude star doesn’t appear to the
eye to be exactly halfway in brightness
between 4th- and 6th-magnitude stars.
Close, but not exactly.
Because a one-magnitude differ-
ence equals the fifth root of 100, a
difference of five magnitudes equals a
hundredfold difference in brightness.
To see a real-life example, step outside
one night this winter and find the
brightest nighttime star, Sirius, the
Dog Star, in the constellation Canis

THE CRAB SUPERNOVA OF 1054 –6.0

VENUS AT MAXIMUM BRIGHTNESS –4.9

THE ANDROMEDA GALAXY (M31) 3.4

PLUTO AT ITS BRIGHTEST 13.7
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