Brightness temperature

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Brightness temperature is the temperature at which a blackbody in thermal equilibrium with its surroundings would have to be in order to duplicate the observed intensity of an object at a frequency ν. This is a useful concept only for radiation that obeys the Rayleigh–Jeans law, and it is extensively used in radio astronomy and planetary science.

For a blackbody, the Planck distribution gives:

I(\nu) = \frac{2 h\nu^{3}}{c^2}\frac{1}{e^{\frac{h\nu}{kT}}-1}

where

In the Rayleigh-Jeans limit of low frequency, we find:

{I_{\nu }=\frac{2 \nu ^2k T}{c^2}}

This can be rewritten to define the brightness temperature as:

{T_b=\frac{I_{\nu } c^2}{2 \nu ^2 k}}

Brightness temperature is a useful diagnostic for temperature measurement if the astronomical source is a blackbody and we are in the Rayleigh-Jeans regime. It is not useful if the source is non-thermal and/or we are in the high frequency limit.

If the Planck distribution is reintroduced into the expression for brightness temperature we find:

{T_b=\frac{h \nu}{k (\text{Exp}[h \nu /k T]-1)}}

So for the Sun, where the temperature may be estimated to be 6000K, we can plot the brightness temperature against wavelength.


[edit] See also

Compare with color temperature.