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Stellar Luminosity Converter

Instantly convert stellar luminosity with our free converter. See conversion tables, formulas, and step-by-step explanations.

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Formula

L = 4*pi*R^2*sigma*T^4; M_abs = 4.83 - 2.5*log10(L/L_sun)

Luminosity in watts equals the input solar luminosities times 3.828e26. Absolute magnitude is calculated from M = 4.83 - 2.5*log10(L). The Stefan-Boltzmann law L = 4*pi*R^2*sigma*T^4 connects luminosity, radius, and temperature, allowing calculation of any unknown quantity from the other two.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Sirius Luminosity Conversion

Problem: Sirius has a luminosity of 25.4 solar luminosities. Convert to watts and absolute magnitude.

Solution: Watts = 25.4 x 3.828e26 = 9.72e27 W\nAbsolute Mag = 4.83 - 2.5 x log10(25.4)\nAbsolute Mag = 4.83 - 2.5 x 1.405 = 1.32

Result: Sirius: 9.72e27 watts, absolute magnitude +1.32

Example 2: Betelgeuse Radius from Luminosity

Problem: Betelgeuse has luminosity of 126,000 L_sun and surface temperature 3,500 K. Find its radius.

Solution: L = 4*pi*R^2*sigma*T^4\nR = sqrt(L / (4*pi*sigma*T^4))\nR = sqrt(4.826e31 / (4*pi*5.67e-8*3500^4))\nR = 6.97e10 m = 1,002 solar radii

Result: Betelgeuse radius is about 1,002 solar radii

Frequently Asked Questions

What is stellar luminosity and how is it measured?

Stellar luminosity is the total amount of electromagnetic energy a star emits per unit time, measured in watts or in solar luminosities. The Sun's luminosity is 3.828 x 10^26 watts. Astronomers determine luminosity by measuring a star's apparent brightness (how bright it appears from Earth) and its distance (from parallax or other methods). Using the inverse-square law, the true luminosity equals the apparent brightness times 4*pi*distance^2. Luminosity is one of the most fundamental properties of a star.

What is absolute magnitude and how does it relate to luminosity?

Absolute magnitude is a logarithmic measure of a star's intrinsic brightness, defined as the apparent magnitude the star would have if placed at exactly 10 parsecs (32.6 light years) from the observer. The Sun has an absolute magnitude of +4.83. Each decrease of 1 magnitude corresponds to a brightness increase of about 2.512 times. The relationship to luminosity is M = 4.83 - 2.5*log10(L/L_sun). Sirius has an absolute magnitude of +1.42 (about 25 times the Sun's luminosity), while Betelgeuse has about -5.85 (roughly 126,000 solar luminosities).

Is my data stored or sent to a server?

No. All calculations run entirely in your browser using JavaScript. No data you enter is ever transmitted to any server or stored anywhere. Your inputs remain completely private.

Can I use the results for professional or academic purposes?

You may use the results for reference and educational purposes. For professional reports, academic papers, or critical decisions, we recommend verifying outputs against peer-reviewed sources or consulting a qualified expert in the relevant field.

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Does Stellar Luminosity Converter work offline?

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References