Five Most Important Equations in Practical Observational Astronomy
These are possibly the Five Most Important Equations in Practical Observational Astronomy
- Inverse-Square Law for Brightness
F = L / (4π d^2)
Light or radio power from a point source declines as the square of the distance. - Magnitude–Flux Conversion
m1 – m2 = -2.5 log10(F1/F2)
m = -2.5 log10(F) + C
Used for photometry and flux calibration. - Angular Resolution (Diffraction Limit)
θ = 1.22 λ / D
Sets the limit of how fine a telescope can resolve details. - Radial Velocity via Doppler Shift
v_r = c * (λ – λ0) / λ0
or ∆f / f0 = -v_r / c
Used in spectroscopy and HI-line velocity work. - Signal-to-Noise Ratio (Radiometer Equation)
SNR = (T_sig / T_sys) * sqrt(B τ)
A core equation in planning and evaluating observations.
Honourable Mentions:
Parallax relation, air mass, coordinate transforms, blackbody law, fringe phase