• 星等系统Astronomical Magnitude Systems


    Astronomical Magnitude Systems

    Astronomical Magnitude Systems


    Contents:


    Definitions of astronomical magnitude systems:

    A major review of astronomical magnitude systems and their calibration is given by
    • Bessel, M. S. 2005, ARA&A, 43, 293
    Johnson System
    This system is defined such that the star Alpha Lyr (Vega) has V=0.03 and all colors equal to zero. Alternatively, the zero-color standard can be defined to be the mean of a number of unreddened A0 V stars of Pop I abundance, using the ensemble of Johnson-Morgan standards to fix the flux scale. It remains to calibrate on an absolute scale the flux of Alpha Lyr or some other appropriate star, Such as aclaibration has been accomplished by Hayes and Lathan (1975), which yielded 3500 Jansky at 5556A for Alpha Lyr. Articles discussing the UBVRI passbands include Bessel (1979), Bessel (1983), and Bessel (1990).

    References:

    • Bessel, M. S. 1990, PASP, 91, 589
    • Bessel, M. S. 1983, PASP, 95, 480
    • Bessel, M. S. 1990, PASP, 102, 1181
    • Hayes, D. S., & Latham, D. W. 1975, ApJ, 197, 593
    • Johnson, H. L. & Morgan, W. W. 1953, ApJ, 117, 313
    In practice, while observing, one monitors groups of standard stars such as those tabulated by Landolt:
    • Landolt, A. U. 1992, AJ, 104, 340
    • Landolt, A. U. 1983, AJ, 88, 439
    • Landolt, A. U. 2007, AJ, 133, 2502
    Various observatories have posted electronic versions of the Landolt standards, e.g.,
    Lick | WIYN | CFHT
    these are of course derivative products and one should always check their veracity against the original work by Landolt.
    Filters: UBVRIJHK
    The original Johnson system consists of the UBV filters whose calibration was intimately tied to the photoelectric detectors in use at the time. The system has since been extended to the red with optical RI and near-infrared JHK filters. The definitions of these filters are not always independent of the detectors involved and can vary slightly fmor observatory to observatory.
    JHK:
    The filters JHK are an important extension of the Johnson system to near-infrared wavelengths. Technology requires different detectors for these wavelengths than UBVRI, so different calibration stars are required (Landolt's standards are useful for optical UBVRI observations).
    The JHK filters have been used in the
    2MASS all sky survey. Since 2MASS is (in principle) completely and uniformly calibrated, any non-variable object in the sky (its coverage is nearly complete) can (in principle!) be used as a calibration reference.
    Note that 2MASS uses a "short" K filter which is slightly different from the original definition of K but is now in common uses because of its superior suppression of thermal terrestrial emission.
    Gunn griz System
    This was originally defined in terms of photoelectric detectors (Thuan & Gunn 1976; Wade et al. 1979), but is now used primarily with CCDs (Schneider, Gunn, & Hoessel 1983; Schild 1984). The griz system is defined by a few dozen standard stars, and the star BD+17deg4708, a subdwarf F6 star with B-V=0.43, is defined to have colors equal to zero. The absolute calibration of this system is simply the monochromatic flux of the star (Oke & Gunn 1983), scaled from g=9.50 to g=0.0, at the effective wavelengths of the griz bands. A number of detailed aspects of broad-band photometry in the specific context of measurements of galaxies at large redshifts are reviewed in Schneider, Gunn, & Hoessel (1983).

    References:

    • Oke, J. B., & Gunn, J. E. 1983, ApJ, 266, 713
    • Schild, R. 1984, ApJ, 286, 450
    • Schneider, D. P., Gunn, J. E., & Hoessel J. G. 1983, ApJ, 264, 337
    • Thuan, T. X., & Gunn, J. E. 1976, PASP, 88, 543
    • Wade, R. A., Hoessel, J. G., Elias, J. H., Huchra, J. P. 1979, PASP, 91, 35
    The Gunn-Thuan griz system is employed by the Sloan Digitan Sky Survey. Since the SDSS is (in principle) completely and uniformly calibrated, any non-variable object in the large swath of sky it covers could (in principle!) be used as a calibration reference.
    AB magnitude System
    This magnitude system is defined such that, when monochromatic flux f_nu is measured in erg sec^-1 cm^-2 Hz^-1,
    m(AB) = -2.5 log(f_nu) - 48.60
    
    
    where the value of the constant is selected to define m(AB)=V for a flat-spectrum source. In this system, an object with constant flux per unit frequency interval has zero color.

    It is helpful to bear in mind the identity

    lambda*f_lambda = nu*f_nu
    
    so
    f_nu = f_lambda*(lambda/nu) = f_lambda*lambda^2/c.
    

    References:

    • Oke, J.B. 1974, ApJS, 27, 21
    STMAG system
    This magnitude system is defined such that an object with constant flux per unit wavelength interval has zero color. It is used by the Hubble Space Telescope photometry packages.

    References:

    • Stone, R.P.S. 1996, ApJS, 107, 423

    The Absolute Magnitude of the Sun:

    Filter M Source
    U 5.61 B&M
    B 5.48 B&M
    V 4.83 B&M
    R 4.42 B&M
    I 4.08 B&M
    J 3.64 B&M
    H 3.32 B&M
    K 3.28 B&M
    K' 3.27 *
    SDSS

    u 6.55 S&G
    g 5.12 S&G
    r 4.68 S&G
    i 4.57 S&G
    z 4.60 S&G
    B&M = Binney & Merrifield
    S&G = Sparke & Gallagher
    *Long and painful hunting through the 2MASS calibration literature.

    Note that the absolute magnitude of the sun is uncertain by typically 0.03 mag. in most bands. The "right" answer depends on whether we're talking about the sun itself, the mean of solar type stars, or stellar atmosphere models.

    See also Chris Willmer's page on the absolute magnitude of the sun.


    Conversions among magnitude systems:

    Conversion from AB magnitudes to Johnson magnitudes:
    The following formulae convert between the AB magnitude systems and those based on Alpha Lyra:
         V	=   V(AB) + 0.044	(+/- 0.004)
         B	=   B(AB) + 0.163	(+/- 0.004)
        Bj	=  Bj(AB) + 0.139	(+/- INDEF)
         R	=   R(AB) - 0.055	(+/- INDEF)
         I	=   I(AB) - 0.309	(+/- INDEF)
         g	=   g(AB) + 0.013	(+/- 0.002)
         r	=   r(AB) + 0.226	(+/- 0.003)
         i	=   i(AB) + 0.296	(+/- 0.005)
         u'	=  u'(AB) + 0.0	        
         g'	=  g'(AB) + 0.0	        
         r'	=  r'(AB) + 0.0	        
         i'	=  i'(AB) + 0.0	        
         z'	=  z'(AB) + 0.0	        
        Rc	=  Rc(AB) - 0.117	(+/- 0.006)
        Ic	=  Ic(AB) - 0.342	(+/- 0.008)
    
    Source: Frei & Gunn 1995
    Conversion from STMAG magnitudes to Johnson magnitudes:
    See the WFPC2 Photometry Cookbook

    Photon Flux:

    Given the passband and the magnitude of an object, the number of tphotons incident at the top of the atmosphere may be estimated using the data in this table:
    Band lambda_c dlambda/lambda Flux at m=0 Reference

    um
    Jy
    U 0.36 0.15 1810 Bessel (1979)
    B 0.44 0.22 4260 Bessel (1979)
    V 0.55 0.16 3640 Bessel (1979)
    R 0.64 0.23 3080 Bessel (1979)
    I 0.79 0.19 2550 Bessel (1979)
    J 1.26 0.16 1600 Campins, Reike, & Lebovsky (1985)
    H 1.60 0.23 1080 Campins, Reike, & Lebovsky (1985)
    K 2.22 0.23 670 Campins, Reike, & Lebovsky (1985)
    g 0.52 0.14 3730 Schneider, Gunn, & Hoessel (1983)
    r 0.67 0.14 4490 Schneider, Gunn, & Hoessel (1983)
    i 0.79 0.16 4760 Schneider, Gunn, & Hoessel (1983)
    z 0.91 0.13 4810 Schneider, Gunn, & Hoessel (1983)

    Also useful are these identities:

    1 Jy = 10^-23 erg sec^-1 cm^-2 Hz^-1
    1 Jy = 1.51e7 photons sec^-1 m^-2 (dlambda/lambda)^-1
    
    See also Strolger's units page.

    Example: How many V-band photons are incident per second on an area of 1 m^2 at the top of the atmosphere from a V=23.90 star? From the table, the flux at V=0 is 3640 Jy; hence, at V=23.90 the flux is diminished by a factor 10^(-0.4*V)=2.75e-10, yielding a flux of 1.e-6 Jy. Since dlambda/lambda=0.16 in V, the flux per second on a 1 m^2 aperture is

    f=1.e-6 Jy * 1.51e7 * 0.16 = 2.42 photons sec^-1
    

    Filter Transformations:

    All filter transformations depend to some extent on the spectral type of the object in question. If this is known, then you are probably best off using the SYNPHOT package in IRAF/STSDAS to compute the transformation. Some transformations are listed below for convenience:
    Bands Equation Reference
    Gunn g to Johnson B: B = g + 0.51 + 0.60*(g-r) [1]
    Gunn g to Johnson V: V = g - 0.03 - 0.42*(g-r) [1]
    Gunn r to Mould R: R = r - 0.51 - 0.15*(g-r) [1]
    Gunn g to Photographic J: J = g + 0.39 + 0.37*(g-r) [1]
    Gunn r to Photographic F: F = r - 0.25 + 0.17*(g-r) [1]
    Gunn i to Mould I: I = i - 0.75 (approx) [1]

    References:

    1. Windhorst, R. W., et al. 1991, ApJ, 380, 362

    Night Sky Brightnesses:

    These values are appropriate for taken from CTIO but should serve as reasonable approximations for most dark sites:
    Lunar Age U B V R I
    (days)
    0 22.0 22.7 21.8 20.9 19.9
    3 21.5 22.4 21.7 20.8 19.9
    7 19.9 21.6 21.4 20.6 19.7
    10 18.5 20.7 20.7 20.3 19.5
    14 17.0 19.5 20.0 19.9 19.2

    Source: NOAO Newsletter #10.


    Notice: This material was adapted for the web from the appendix to the unpublished manuscript Observations of Distant Galaxies by R. Kron and H. Spinrad, without permission of the authors, by G. Wirth. This page was copied without permission by S. McGaugh, who made some practical additions (e.g., the solar absolute magnitude in various bands; references to Landolt standards). There is probably some deep lesson in this about how [mis]information propogates on the web, but we're all too lazy to contemplate it.

    *************

    转摘自 http://www.astro.umd.edu/~ssm/ASTR620/mags.html, 版权归原作者所有。

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/liyropt/p/2024855.html
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