Title: Basic Physics Concepts That Underlie Space Science
1Basic Physics Concepts That Underlie Space Science
Ruth Skoug LASSO Summer 2008 Workshop July 14-25,
2008
2Outline
- Atoms and Atomic Structure
- Forces
- Electromagnetic Waves
- Phases of Matter
- Particle Distributions
- Plasmas
- Gravity/Orbits/Propulsion
- Distance Scales
- Time Scales
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4Atom Smallest unit of matter that can be
identified as a given element Central nucleus
includes positively charged particles
protons electrically neutral particles
neutrons Negatively charged particles (electrons
) orbit the nucleus Number of protons
identifies the element
5Atom Smallest unit of matter that can be
identified as a given element Central nucleus
includes positively charged particles
protons electrically neutral particles
neutrons Negatively charged particles (electrons
) orbit the nucleus Number of protons
identifies the element
H or 1H
He or 4He
6Protons positive electrical charge mass
1.67x10-27 kg size 10-15 m
(0.000000000000001 m) Neutrons no electrical
charge mass 1.67x10-27 kg (approx. same as
proton) size 10-15 m (approx. same as
proton) Electrons negative electrical
charge mass 9.11x10-31 kg proton mass /
1800 size 10-18 m proton size / 1000
7Ions Charged atoms In space physics, ion is
used only to refer to positively charged atoms.
8Ions Charged atoms In space physics, ion is
used only to refer to positively charged atoms.
H (or H0)
9Ions Charged atoms In space physics, ion is
used only to refer to positively charged atoms.
H (or H0)
H
10Ions Charged atoms In space physics, ion is
used only to refer to positively charged atoms.
H (or H0)
H
He
11Ions Charged atoms In space physics, ion is
used only to refer to positively charged atoms.
H (or H0)
H
He
He
12Ions Charged atoms In space physics, ion is
used only to refer to positively charged atoms.
H (or H0)
H
He
He
He
13Isotopes Same element, different number of
neutrons
14Isotopes Same element, different number of
neutrons
1H (or H) (or even 1H0)
3H
2H
15Isotopes Same element, different number of
neutrons
1H (or H) (or even 1H0)
3H
2H
4He
3He
16Ions Charged atoms
17Ions Charged atoms
16O5
18Evolution of the Atomic Model
- Plum pudding model
- negatively charged electron raisins floating in
a positively charged pudding
1897 (Thomson)
19Rutherford Scattering
Expected scattering at small angles found
large-angle scattering Implies a heavy
nucleus Disproves Thomsons model
20Evolution of the Atomic Model
1909 (Rutherford)
1897 (Thomson)
- Scattering implies heavy nucleus
- Electrons orbit around nucleus
21Atomic/Molecular/Nuclear Transitions
Atoms/molecules/nucleii have a characteristic
lowest energy state (ground state) The addition
of energy raises the energy level by a quantized
amount To get back to the ground state, this
excess energy is released as an EM wave The
wavelength (color) of this light is a
characteristic of the material
22Evolution of the Atomic Model
1909 (Rutherford)
1897 (Thomson)
- Characteristic colors for each atom imply
electrons can only be in special orbits - Electrons can jump from one orbit to another, but
no partial jumps - Energy can only change in small, discrete jumps
-- quanta
1913 (Bohr)
23Two-Slit Experiment
Shine light through two slits -- see an
interference pattern The same pattern is seen
when particles pass through two slits! Implies
wave-particle duality (particles can act like
waves)
24Evolution of the Atomic Model
1909 (Rutherford)
1897 (Thomson)
- Wave/particle duality
- Only know probability of an electron being in a
given location
1913 (Bohr)
Present (Schrodinger)
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26Forces
- Force mass acceleration (F m A)
- Forces
- Gravity
- Electric force
- Magnetic force
- Strong and weak nuclear forces (not discussed
here) - Sources of magnetic fields (electricity
magnetism) - Dipole magnetic fields
- Charged-particle motion in a dipole magnetic field
27Forces
- Force mass acceleration (F m A)
- Force is a push or pull on an object
- Weight is a force how hard the gravity of the
Earth is pulling on something - Force is a vector -- both magnitude and direction
are important - A force can change the speed of an object
- A force can change the direction of an object
28Particle motions are affected by forces Gravity
attraction between any two things which have
mass very weak force F Gm1m2/r2
r distance between objects M, m mass of
objects
29Particle motions are affected by
forces Electrical force acts between any two
charged particles opposite charges attract
(positive negative) like charges repel (both
or both ) neutral particles not affected
F kq1q2/r2
r distance between particles q charge of
particle
Electric field E Electric force per unit charge
F q E
30Magnetism
- People have known for thousands of years that
certain stones attract iron - Magnets have north and south poles (dipoles)
- Like poles repel
- Opposite poles attract
- Isolated magnetic poles are NOT observed
31- Compass needles (which are themselves magnets)
are attracted to magnets - North pole of compass attracted to south pole of
magnet
32In 1600, William Gilbert determined that compass
needles point in specific directions because the
Earth is a permanent magnet
33- The Earths magnetic axis is currently 11 away
from the geographic spin axis - The Earths geographic North pole is a magnetic
South pole
34Magnetic field line patterns of a bar magnet
35- Near the Earth, the Earths field lines look like
those of a bar magnet - Particles can be trapped on these field lines
(Van Allen belts) - First discovery of the space age, 1958
36- Magnetism
-
- There is a connection between electricity and
magnetism - 1821 Oersted finds that an electric current
causes a compass needle to move - Upon learning this, Ampere finds
- electric currents attract iron
- parallel electric currents attract each other
- proposes that electric currents are the source
of all magnetism - Magnetism is due to electric currents, that is to
moving electric charges
37Magnetism Magnetic force on charged particles
given by F q (v x B) q charge, v
velocity, B magnetic field force is
proportional to speed v force is always
perpendicular to the direction of motion force
is perpendicular to the magnetic field B
B
So, how do particles move in a magnetic field?
38Magnetism Magnetic force on charged particles
given by F q (v x B) force is
proportional to speed v force is always
perpendicular to the direction of motion force
is perpendicular to the magnetic field B
- In circles around the field line
- In a straight line along the field direction
- Putting those together gives spirals
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40- Magnetism
- So, back to magnetism in matter
- Atoms contain electrons which
- orbit the nucleus
- spin on their own axis
- These moving charges create magnetic fields
- There are 3 types of magnetism
- Paramagnetism permanent magnetic dipoles are
randomly oriented, dipoles can be aligned by an
external magnetic field - Ferromagnetism permanent magnetic dipoles are
aligned within domains, domains can be aligned by
an external magnetic field, and will stay aligned
after the field is removed - Diamagnetism no permanent magnetic dipoles, but
dipoles can be induced by an applied magnetic
field
41Magnetic Domains
Unmagnetized material
Magnetized material
42Electromagnetic waves time-varying
combination of electric and magnetic fields
propagate in vacuum at the speed of light 3 x
108 m/s (300,000,000 m/s) carry energy
have no mass
43Electromagnetic Waves
Wavelength is the distance between wave crests or
troughs Period is how long (time) it takes to
cover one wavelength. Frequency 1 /
period Speed Distance / Time Wavelength /
Period Wavelength Frequency For
electromagnetic waves (in vacuum), speed is a
constant the speed of light (c 3x108 m/s)
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45Electromagnetic Spectrum
46Electromagnetic Spectrum
47Electromagnetic Spectrum
48Radiation
- Energy traveling through space
- Waves (gamma rays, light, UV, microwaves, radio
waves, ) - Particles (alphas (He), betas (electrons),
neutrons) - Some atoms and nuclei are unstable and give off
radiation when they decay (break apart) - Energy can also be released when atoms come
together (fusion) - Radioactive substances are those that decay
naturally
49Phases of Matter
- Temperature
- Solids
- Liquids
- Gases
- Plasmas
50Energy
- Energy is the ability to do work
- Work is the transfer of energy
- Work is moving an object by means of a force
- Something moving has kinetic energy
- E 1/2 m v2
- m mass, v speed
- Stored energy is called potential energy
- Lift an object in a gravitational field
- Compress a spring
- Units of energy
- Electron volt (eV)
- Air molecules 1/40 eV
- Atom at Suns surface 0.5 eV
- Auroral particle 100010,000 eV (110 keV)
- Ring current particle 50,000 eV (50 keV)
- Radiation belt particles 10,000,000 eV (10 MeV)
51Heat and Temperature Heat can be thought of as
the internal energy of the atoms and molecules
that make up a substance. Temperature is a
relative term, and refers to the average kinetic
energy (KE 1/2 m v2) of the atoms and
molecules in a substance. Three temperature
scales Farenheit, Celsius, Kelvin
F (9/5) x C 32 C (5/9) x (F 32) K
C 273
52Cold substances are solid
53When they warm up, they become liquid
54When they warm up further, they become a gas
55Further warming can ionize the particles, forming
a plasma
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57Phases of Matter
58- Plasma
- Ionized gas, consisting of positively and
negatively charged particles (ions and electrons) - Fourth state of matter
- 99 of the known material in the Universe
consists of plasma
59- Plasma
- Ionized gas, consisting of positively and
negatively charged particles (ions and electrons) - Fourth state of matter
- 99 of the known material in the Universe
consists of plasma - Examples
- Sun, solar wind, magnetosphere, ionosphere,
lightning discharge - Fluorescent light bulb, neon sign
- Formed in reactors for fusion research
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61Particle Distributions
- Velocity distributions
- Moments
- density
- velocity
- temperature
62Describing a Gas
v
Each particle is characterized by its speed and
its direction of motion, i.e., its vector
velocity, v Full description Number of
particles N within a given volume of space ?x
that are moving with velocities in a range ?v
about v
63Distribution Function
64Particle Distributions the bell-shaped curve
65Shorthand Description Average Properties
- Density Average number of particles (all
energies) within a given volume of space - Flow Velocity Average vector velocity of all
the particles in a given volume of space - Temperature Average kinetic energy of the
random motion relative to the average flow
66Average Properties (Moments)
Density area under the curve Flow speed
location of peak Temperature width of peak
)
Flow
x,v
Speed
f(
Density
Temperature
v
0
x
67Particle Distributions Spectrogram Display
104
103
102
Energy (eV)
101
100
Time -gt
68Plasmas
- Examples
- Collective behavior
- Frozen-in magnetic field
- Reconnection
- Shock waves
69Plasma Distributions
fe(x,v) fi1(x,v) fi2(x,v)
70Plasma Distributions Multiple Species
71Plasma Behavior
Charged particles respond to electric and
magnetic fields F qE F qvxB Charged
particles create electric and magnetic fields E
q/r2 B qv/r
Therefore, each particle feels the combined
effects of all the others Collective motion!
The fields and particles evolve self-consistently.
72Plasmas Behave Like a Fluid
Magnetic field line
Magnetic flux tube
Magnetohydrodynamics Flux tube maintains its
integrity as the plasma flows, and two parcels of
plasma linked by a flux tube remain linked.
- Implications
- The magnetic field is frozen-in to the flow.
- The flow carries the imbedded magnetic field
along. - Plasmas have a hard time mixing across magnetic
field lines.
73Magnetic ReconnectionLocal Violation of
Frozen-In Flow
Plays a crucial role in many plasma systems!
74Waves in Plasmas
Waves are the means for transmitting information
from one point to another.
Example Sound waves launched from the nose of an
airplane propagate into the incoming air flow and
tell it to deflect around the airplane.
In neutral gases, there is only one wave mode
sound waves. In plasmas, there are several wave
modes, with different propagation speeds.
75Shock Waves
What if the oncoming flow speed is greater than
the speed of the sound waves? How can the flow
know that it needs to deflect around the airplane?
76Shock Waves
What if the oncoming flow speed is greater than
the speed of the sound waves? How can the flow
know that it needs to deflect around the airplane?
Shock Wave
Sonic Boom!
77Shock Waves in Plasmas
Same principle, different physics!
- Examples of Shock Waves in Plasmas
- Earths bow shock
- Interplanetary shocks
- Supernova shocks
- Shocks in the solar atmosphere
- High-altitude nuclear explosions
Shock waves in plasmas can accelerate some
particles to extremely high energies (e.g.,
cosmic rays)!
78Gravity/Orbits/Propulsion
Acceleration of a body experiencing a force F
m a (or a F/m) Gravitational force exerted
by body of mass M on another body of mass m F
GMm/r2 Resulting acceleration A
GM/r2 Orbital radius of a body in a circular
orbit R GM/v2 (or v2 GM/r) Orbital
period T (4p2/GM)1/2 r3/2
79Gravity/Orbits/Propulsion
Escape velocity vesc (2GM/R)1/2 Amount of
energy needed to move a body from R to
infinity E GMm/R (from the Earth, E/m6 x 107
joules/kg)
80Distance Scales
- Radius of the hydrogen atom 5 x 10-11 m
- Distance between ions in the suns visible
surface 2 x 10-8 m - Distance between air molecules at Earths
surface 7.4 x 10-6 m - Distance between solar wind ions 5 x 10-3 m (
0.5 cm) - Distance between students in the classroom 1 m
- Height of Mt. Everest 8.8 x 103 m
- Space shuttle altitude 3 x 105 m ( 300 km)
81Distance Scales
- Radius of Earth 6370 km (RE)
- Radius of Sun 100 RE (also, 1 million
miles) - Earth - Moon distance
- Earth - Sun distance
82Distance Scales
- Radius of Earth 6370 km (RE)
- Radius of Sun 100 RE (also, 1 million
miles) - Earth - Moon distance 60 RE
- Earth - Sun distance 1.5 x 108 km 1 AU
- (also, 100 million miles)
- Size of Magnetosphere 10 RE on front sides
-
- Mars - Sun distance
- Jupiter - Sun distance
- Saturn - Sun distance
- Pluto - Sun distance
83Distance Scales
- Radius of Earth 6370 km (RE)
- Radius of Sun 100 RE (also, 1 million
miles) - Earth - Moon distance 60 RE
- Earth - Sun distance 1.5 x 108 km 1 AU
- (also, 100 million miles)
- Size of Magnetosphere 10 RE on front sides
-
- Mars - Sun distance 1.5 AU
- Jupiter - Sun distance 5 AU
- Saturn - Sun distance 10 AU
- Pluto - Sun distance 39 AU
- Light year distance light travels in 1 year
- Nearest star
84Distance Scales
- Radius of Earth 6370 km (RE)
- Radius of Sun 100 RE (also, 1 million
miles) - Earth - Moon distance 60 RE
- Earth - Sun distance 1.5 x 108 km 1 AU
- (also, 100 million miles)
- Size of Magnetosphere 10 RE on front sides
-
- Mars - Sun distance 1.5 AU
- Jupiter - Sun distance 5 AU
- Saturn - Sun distance 10 AU
- Pluto - Sun distance 39 AU
- Light year distance light travels in 1 year
63000 AU - Nearest star 4.3 light years
85Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
86Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
87Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
88Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
89Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
90Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 1.25 hours
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU)
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
91Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 1.25 hours
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 5.3 hours
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
92Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 1.25 hours
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 5.3 hours
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon 159 days
- Earth to the Sun
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
93Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 1.25 hours
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 5.3 hours
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon 159 days
- Earth to the Sun 154 years
- Earth to Saturn
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
94Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 1.25 hours
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 5.3 hours
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon 159 days
- Earth to the Sun 154 years
- Earth to Saturn 1541 years
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
95Time Scales
- Distance (speed) x (time)
- Light from Sun to Earth 8.3 minutes
- Solar wind particles (400 km/s) from Sun to
Earth 4.3 days - Radio signals (light)
- Earth to moon 1.3 seconds
- Mars (1.5 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 4 - 21 minutes
- Saturn (10 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 1.25 hours
- Pluto (39 AU) to Earth (1 AU) 5.3 hours
- Travel time for automobile (100 km/hr)
- Earth to the moon 159 days
- Earth to the Sun 154 years
- Earth to Saturn 1541 years
- Travel time for Cassini spacecraft to Saturn
6.7 years