Astronomy / Space Max Apparent magnitude for human eye?

Anyone know what the apparent magnitude limit is for human eyes, if in space and looking through perfect window?

It is normally compensated for atmosphere I think, so what would it be without?

Not sure the question makes sense, hope you get what I mean.
 
Good question mate. I'm hoping we have some astronomers on here who can answer it.

Would help Frontier get the correct level of stars in the background for ED.
 

Sir.Tj

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Good question mate. I'm hoping we have some astronomers on here who can answer it.

Would help Frontier get the correct level of stars in the background for ED.

Funny you should say that.....

Hopefully our very own Dr Wookie can answer your question :D
 
From memory the maximum magnitude the average pair of eyes can resolve on a good clear night (without light pollution) is around mag 6.0... With Binoculars and Telescopes this goes up depending on the size/power of the optics.
 
Yes, but what is that value in space?

Had a look through some Astronomical forums. Even on these, the information is a little vague.

The earths atmosphere lets in around 90% of visible light, so logically you should see 10% more stars in space. There is a problem though, the level of night vision.

Humans take between 15 minutes and a hour to gain full night vision, which would allow you to see a much greater numbers of stars. In a lit up cockpit, it's unlikely you would have any night vision at all.
 
Yep, is why I have mentioned several times on these forums, that a switch for cockpit displays would be nice. :)

I really should read back on the forums more, but I'm lazy.

Turning the lights out for 15 minutes plus seem abit extreme though. :p
 
This video is the best answer I've found on the topic. It suggests that the atmosphere is pretty transparent to light in the visible spectrum (the light it blocks is mostly UV, etc.) Something like 98% of visible light gets through assuming it's travelling through pure atmosphere (i.e. not much water vapour or air-borne dust in the way).

Probably the difference between the faintness of stars you could see in space versus on Earth would be less than the differences you'd find between different people. It's plausible that you might have one person in the Atacama desert and another on the Moon, and still find that the person in the Atacama desert can pick out fainter stars, just because their vision is better suited. What would be different is that the stars on the moon would be crisper, and wouldn't twinkle, due to the lack of turbulent atmosphere.

I could be wrong though. The internet is not a good place to check facts, and I'm struggling to validate that 98% figure.
 
Sounds about right to me - where's a boffin when you need one?

Probably writing an academic paper, and almost certainly not posting stuff up on the internet. One of the first articles I read claimed that you can't see stars from space! Moonfaker propaganda.

It's worth noting that there is a much bigger difference when you're talking about stargazing near light pollution. The only time I've really seen the sky in its full majesty was a holiday in the Kalahari desert. It really was much more impressive than you ever see it back in England.
 
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The magnitude system comes from the Ancient Greeks, and is unaffected by light pollution or crappy weather :). The definition of magnitude has changed a bit, but the original system arranged visible stars into 6 magnitudes; so it's no surprise that the faintest visible stars have magnitudes of about 6 :). By the way, the modern values are corrected for atmospheric effects, so they would be the same in space.
 
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