The brightness of a star depends on its
size and temperature only
size and distance from the earth
size, temperature and mass
size, temperature and distance from the earth
Answer is Right!
Answer is Wrong!
This question was previously asked in
UPSC NDA-1 – 2016
The apparent brightness of a star as observed from Earth depends on two primary factors: its intrinsic luminosity and its distance from the observer. The intrinsic luminosity of a star, which is the total energy it radiates per unit time, is determined by its size (radius) and its surface temperature. Larger and hotter stars are more luminous. Therefore, the brightness we perceive (apparent brightness) is a function of the star’s size, temperature (which together determine luminosity), and the distance the light travels to reach us. The inverse square law dictates that brightness decreases with the square of the distance.