apparent magnitude (brightness of a star when viewed from Earth) depends on the size of the star, how hot it is, and its distance from Earth
Earth's apparent magnitude would depend on where it is viewed from. For instance, from Saturn, the apparent magnitude is 1.45. From Mars is would be somewhat higher.
it has an apparent magnitude of 2.1
The apparent magnitude is 2.4
Apparent magnitude is 0.77 Absolute magnitude is 2.21Wikipedia lists its visual magnitude as 0.77.
The Sun with an apparent magnitude of -26.74. Followed by Sirius with an apparent magnitude of -1.46
Earth's apparent magnitude would depend on where it is viewed from. For instance, from Saturn, the apparent magnitude is 1.45. From Mars is would be somewhat higher.
Antares Absolute and Apparent Magnitude Absolute Magnitude~ -5.2 Apparent Magnitude~ +0.60
it has an apparent magnitude of 2.1
The apparent magnitude of Neptune is 7.8
Vega has an apparent magnitude of 0.03.
Apparent magnitude is the brightness of an object as seen from Earth without any atmosphere.
The two types are apparent magnitude, the magnitude of a star as it appears to us, and absolute magnitude, which is what a star's apparent magnitude would be at a standard distance of ten parsecs.
The apparent magnitude of the Cartwheel Galaxy is 15.2
The apparent magnitude of a star is a measure of its brightness.
The apparent magnitude is 2.4
Apparent magnitude: How bright something looks to us. Absolute magnitude: How bright something really is - expressed as the apparent magnitude it would have at a standard distance.
it is an apparent magnitude of 1.74