The
monochromatic AB magnitude is defined as the logarithm of a
spectral flux density with the usual scaling of astronomical magnitudes and a zero-point of about
janskys (symbol Jy), where 1 Jy = = ("about" because the true definition of the zero point is based on magnitudes as shown below). If the spectral flux density is denoted , the monochromatic AB magnitude is: m_\text{AB} \approx -2.5 \log_{10} \left(\frac{f_{\nu}}{\mathrm{3631\,Jy}}\right), or, with still in janskys, m_\text{AB} = -2.5 \log_{10} f_{\nu} + 8.90. The exact definition is stated relative to the
cgs units of : m_\text{AB} = -2.5 \log_{10} f_{\nu} - 48.60. Inverting this leads to the true definition of the numerical value "" often cited: f_{\nu,0} = 10^{\tfrac{48.60}{-2.5}} \approx 3.631 \times 10^{-20} \mathrm{erg\, {cm}^{-2}} Actual measurements are always made across some continuous range of wavelengths. The
bandpass AB magnitude is defined so that the zero point corresponds to a bandpass-averaged spectral flux density of about : m_\text{AB} \approx -2.5 \log_{10} \left(\frac{\int f_\nu {(h\nu)}^{-1} e(\nu)\, \mathrm{d}\nu}{\int \mathrm{3631 \, Jy} \, {(h\nu)}^{-1} e(\nu) \, \mathrm{d}\nu}\right), where is the "equal-energy" filter response function and the term assumes that the detector is a photon-counting device such as a
CCD or
photomultiplier. Filter responses are sometimes expressed as quantum efficiencies , that is, in terms of their response per photon, rather than per unit energy. In those cases the term has been folded into the definition of , yielding: m_\text{AB} \approx -2.5 \log_{10} \left(\frac{\int f_\nu\, q(\nu)\, \mathrm{d}\nu}{\int \mathrm{3631 \, Jy} \, q(\nu) \, \mathrm{d}\nu}\right), The STMAG system is similarly defined, but for constant flux per unit wavelength interval instead. AB stands for "absolute" in the sense that no relative reference object is used (unlike using
Vega as a baseline object). This must not be confused with
absolute magnitude in the sense of the apparent brightness of an object if seen from a distance of 10
parsecs. == Expression in terms of ==