ThinksMarkedly wrote: SNIP
That's about 33x more than the full moon on Earth, which in turn is enough to cast shadows.
Another tidbit: on Earth, the minimum brightness for something to be seen during the day is about -4. While the exact value for Manticore, Sphinx, and Gryphon depend on their atmospheres, we're talking about 12 magnitudes of difference. So either star is visible in any of the planets any time it has risen, even during daytime.
Robert_A_Woodward wrote:Absolute magnitude is the brightness at 10 parsecs (32.6 light years). Thus, the Sun with its absolute magnitude of 4.83 would be 100 times brighter (which by the way is 5 magnitudes) at 1 parsec (i.e., -.07 apparent). At .326 light years (3.0843X10^14 meters), it would have an apparent magnitude of -5.07. According to the data in _House of Steel_, the distances between Manticore-A and Manticore-B ranges from 650 to 827 light minutes. Let's use the 827 number and assume the distance is the same for the planet Manticore. That is about 1/12440 of the .326 light years. That means a magnitude increase of just over 10. The number I calculate for Manticore B (assuming it is as bright as the Sun), when viewed the Landing sky, is -15.57.
So it is v bright indeed. Again I had never thought of the daytime 'visibility' aspect.
I take Relax's point too. [Photometry was never a favourite subject!]
you have to consider both source area and source brightness when thinking about the amount of light falling on a surface - such as the earth.
We can see quite well by moonlight, because it covers a 'large' portion of the sky - even though it is actually not very bright.
These stars would be very bright, but because they would still be point like, the overall effect might not be so much.
Having said that I was quite surprised a few years ago to see a 'Venus' path on the sea, in the same way you can see a 'Moon' path, though much fainter. So, on the Maniticore planets you would see very bright equivalents indeed! Honor could well have used that in her sailing days!
Lots of hand waving going on here