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Distance modulus

The distance modulus is a way of expressing distances that is often used in astronomy. It describes distances on a logarithmic scale based on the astronomical magnitude system. The distance modulus is a way of expressing distances that is often used in astronomy. It describes distances on a logarithmic scale based on the astronomical magnitude system. The distance modulus μ = m − M {displaystyle mu =m-M} is the difference between the apparent magnitude m {displaystyle m} (ideally, corrected from the effects of interstellar absorption) and the absolute magnitude M {displaystyle M} of an astronomical object. It is related to the distance d {displaystyle d} in parsecs by: This definition is convenient because the observed brightness of a light source is related to its distance by the inverse square law (a source twice as far away appears one quarter as bright) and because brightnesses are usually expressed not directly, but in magnitudes. Absolute magnitude M {displaystyle M} is defined as the apparent magnitude of an object when seen at a distance of 10 parsecs. Suppose a light source has luminosity L(d) when observed from a distance of d {displaystyle d} parsecs, and luminosity L(10) when observed from a distance of 10 parsecs. The inverse-square law is then written like:

[ "Metallicity", "Globular cluster", "Photometry (optics)" ]
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