"Brad Schaefer: For all we know, Betelgeuse has just gone supernova. Betelgeuse is about a thousand light years away. So if Betelgeuse has gone supernova anytime in the last thousand years, the light of this supernova explosion could be speeding to us even as we speak – maybe it will arrive tonight – and suddenly Betelgeuse will flash into being brighter than a million full moons in the sky – all up above us. It would be a spectacular sight."
I wish they would be more careful with the terms when they say something like that. There are pretty good reasons why Scientists should use words like irradiance, radiance and radiant intensity and especially NOT to use the damn "intensity" in their papers (it's almost always wrong). Brighter with respect to what? For the general audience, "brightness" is also a physical term, but with a totally different meaning:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BrightnessYes, if all the light comes from a point (distant star), the relative radiance between moon and star gone supernova is definetely high, but since it is almost a point source, it doesn't have surface area to provide high amount of power.
This all comes back to question how much EM radiation does the supernova release. SN1006 (class 1a) blew up 7200 lightyears back, and the result was that it was visible, about the size of Venus and one quarter of the brightness of the moon. Betelgeuse is 640 lightyears away, so a factor of ten less for distance equals factor of 100 for the area. So about hundred times brighter than the moon, if it has approximately the same amount of energy. I need to check the former irradiance number and how close it is to this estimation.
How much brighter is 100 times more brighter illumination than the moon?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DaylightIt is about the illumination under a storm cloud during midday. It is hard to believe one could damage eyes with that amount of power.
There are some differences between classes 1 and 2, and I think 1a would be the most dangerous. I'll let the astronomers do the classification stuff, just tell me the estimate of the released electromagnetical radiation.
Mika