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Moon and Regulus
Regulus is one of the brightest lights in the night sky. But just how bright depends on how you look at it.
Seen with the eye alone, the heart of the lion has a magnitude of about 1.4. In this scale, the brighter an object, the lower the number. The brightest star in the night sky, Sirius, has a magnitude of minus-1.4. And the faintest stars visible under a dark sky have a magnitude of about six, which is only about a thousandth as bright as Sirius.
Since the stars are all at different distances, that number doesn’t tell you a star’s true brightness. For that, astronomers calculate its absolute magnitude. That’s how bright the star would look at a distance of about 32 light-years. In this scale, Regulus has a magnitude of minus point five. If you lined up Regulus and the Sun at that distance, Regulus would be more than a hundred times brighter.
Even that doesn’t give you the star’s total brightness, because it counts only a star’s visible light. But stars emit many other forms of energy as well. Because Regulus is quite hot, it produces a lot of ultraviolet light. When you add that to the visible light, the star is about 350 times brighter than the Sun. So Regulus is a brilliant beacon any way you look at it.
And you can get a good look at Regulus the next couple of nights. It’s well below the Moon as they climb into good view tonight, about midnight, but much closer to it tomorrow night.
Script by Damond Benningfield