Strömgren photometric system


The photometric system by Strömgren, abbreviated also as uvbyβ or simply uvby, and sometimes referred as Strömgren - Crawford photometric system, is a four-colour medium-passband photometric system plus Hβ filters for determining magnitudes and obtaining spectral classification of stars. Its use was pioneered by the Danish astronomer Bengt Strömgren in 1956 and was extended by his colleague the American astronomer David L. Crawford in 1958.
It is often considered to be a powerful tool and successful investigating the brightness and effective temperature of stars. This photometric system also has a general advantage as it can be used to measure the effects of reddening and interstellar extinction. This system also allows calculation of parameters from the b and y filters without the effects of reddening, termed m 1 and c 1.

Wavelength and half-width response functions

Indices

There are four main indices :, m1, c1, β
m1 = −
c1 = −
β = βnarrow−βwide
Where;
y magnitudes are well-correlated with Johnson-Morgan V magnitudes.
is sensitive to stellar temperature.
c1 is sensitive to the surface gravity.
m1 is sensitive to the metallicity.