20170429

Astronomy midterm question: same absolute magnitude stars, different distances closer than 10 parsecs?

Astronomy 210 Midterm 2, spring semester 2017
Cuesta College, San Luis Obispo, CA

An astronomy question on an online discussion board[*] was asked and answered:
Pdg: Can two stars have the same absolute magnitude, if they both have different distances closer than 10 parsecs?
pub: Yes, if the nearer star has a brighter apparent magnitude (bigger negative number, or smaller positive number), and the farther star has a dimmer apparent magnitude.
Discuss whether this answer is correct or incorrect, and how you know this. Explain using the relationships between apparent magnitude, absolute magnitude, and distance.

[*] answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20170305023512AAeRXO8.

Solution and grading rubric:
  • p:
    Correct. Understands difference between apparent magnitude m (brightness as seen from Earth, when placed at their actual distance from Earth) and absolute magnitude M (brightness as seen from Earth, when placed at the "fair comparison distance" of 10 parsecs away), and discusses:
    1. a star 10 parsecs away with a certain absolute magnitude will get brighter when placed closer than 10 parsecs away from Earth, and thus its apparent magnitude will be brighter than its absolute magnitude; and
    2. since both stars have the same absolute magnitude at 10 parsecs, the nearer star would be located much closer than 10 parsecs, resulting in a much brighter apparent magnitude, while the farther star would be located just a little closer than 10 parsecs, resulting in only a slightly brighter apparent magnitude, dimmer than the other star.
  • r:
    Nearly correct (explanation weak, unclear or only nearly complete); includes extraneous/tangential information; or has minor errors. May have one star located closer than 10 parsecs, or moving in the wrong direction to change its apparent magnitude to its absolute magnitude.
  • t:
    Contains right ideas, but discussion is unclear/incomplete or contains major errors. At least discussion demonstrates understanding of relationships between apparent magnitudes, absolute magnitudes, and distances.
  • v:
    Limited relevant discussion of supporting evidence of at least some merit, but in an inconsistent or unclear manner. At least attempts to use relationships between apparent magnitudes, absolute magnitudes, and distances.
  • x:
    Implementation/application of ideas, but credit given for effort rather than merit. Discussion based on garbled definitions of, or not based on proper relationships between apparent magnitudes, absolute magnitudes, and distances.
  • y:
    Irrelevant discussion/effectively blank.
  • z:
    Blank.
Grading distribution:
Section 30674
Exam code: midterm02nDcc
p: 13 students
r: 2 students
t: 2 students
v: 4 students
x: 0 students
y: 0 students
z: 0 students

A sample "p" response (from student 7697):

Another sample "p" response (from student 5150):

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