Title: Light and Atoms
1Light and Atoms
2Introduction
- Due to the vast distances, with few exceptions,
direct measurements of astronomical bodies are
not possible
3Introduction
- We study remote bodies indirectly by analyzing
their light
4Introduction
- Understanding the properties of light is
therefore essential
5Introduction
- Care must be given to distinguish light
signatures that belong to the distant body from
signatures that do not (e.g., our atmosphere may
distort distant light signals)
6Properties of Light
- Introduction
- Light is radiant energy it does not require a
medium for travel
7Properties of Light
- Introduction
- Light travels at 299,792.458 km/s in a vacuum
(fast enough to circle the Earth 7.5 times in one
second)
8Properties of Light
- Introduction
- Speed of light in a vacuum is constant and is
denoted by the letter c
9Properties of Light
- Introduction
- However, the speed of light is reduced as it
traverses transparent materials and the speed is
also dependent on color
10Properties of Light
- The Nature of Light Waves or Particles?
- One model of light electromagnetic wave
- The wave travels as a result of a fundamental
relationship between electricity and magnetism - A changing magnetic field creates an electric
field and a changing electric field creates a
magnetic field
11Properties of Light
- The Nature of Light Waves or Particles?
- One model of light electromagnetic wave
- This changing/creation scheme allows the light to
bootstrap its way across a vacuum - Wave picture cannot explain all of lights
properties
12Properties of Light
Photon_Stream
- The Nature of Light (continued)
- Another model of light photons
- Light thought of as a stream of particles
- Each photon particle carries energy
13Properties of Light
Photon_Stream
- Wave Particle Duality
- In a vacuum, photons travel in straight lines,
but behave like waves - Sub-atomic particles also act as waves
- Wave-particle duality All particles of nature
behave as both a wave and a particle
14Properties of Light
Photon_Stream
- The Nature of Light (continued)
- Another model of light photons
- Which property of light manifests itself depends
on the situation - We concentrate on the wave picture henceforth
15Properties of Light
- Light and Color
- Colors to which the human eye is sensitive is
referred to as the visible spectrum - In the wave theory, color is determined by the
lights wavelength (symbolized as l)
16Properties of Light
- Light and Color
- Nanometer (10-9 m)is the convenient unit
- Red 700 nm (longest visible wavelength), violet
400 nm (shortest visible wavelength)
17Properties of Light
- Characterizing Electromagnetic Waves by Their
Frequency - Frequency (or n) is the number of wave crests
that pass a given point in 1 second (measured in
Hertz, Hz) - Important relation nl c
18Properties of Light
- Light with no distinguishing color is called
white light - White light is a mixture of all colors
19Properties of Light
- A prism demonstrates that white light is a
mixture of wavelengths by its creation of a
spectrum - Additionally, one can recombine a spectrum of
colors and obtain white light
20The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Introduction
- Electromagnetic spectrum is composed of
- radio waves
- microwaves
- infrared, visible light
- ultraviolet, x rays
- gamma rays
21The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Introduction
- Longest wavelengths are more than 103 km
- Shortest wavelengths are less than 10-18 m
- Various instruments used to explore the various
regions of the spectrum
22The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Infrared Radiation
- Sir William Herschel (around 1800) showed heat
radiation related to visible light - He measured an elevated temperature just off the
red end of a solar spectrum infrared energy - Our skin feels infrared as heat
23The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Ultraviolet Light
- J. Ritter in 1801 noticed silver chloride
blackened when exposed to light just beyond the
violet end of the visible spectrum
24The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Radio Waves
- Predicted by Maxwell in mid-1800s, Hertz produced
radio waves in 1888 - Jansky discovered radio waves from cosmic sources
in the 1930s, the birth of radio astronomy
25The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Radio Waves
- Radio waves are used to study a wide range of
astronomical processes - Radio waves also used for communication,
microwave ovens, and search for extraterrestrials
26The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Other Wavelength Regions
- X-rays
- Roentgen discovered X rays in 1895
- First detected beyond the Earth in the Sun in
late 1940s
27The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Other Wavelength Regions
- X-rays
- Used by doctors to scan bones and organs
- Used by astronomers to detect black holes and
tenuous gas in distant galaxies
28The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Other Wavelength Regions
- Gamma rays and region between infrared and radio
- Relatively unexplored regions
- Difficult to measure
29The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Energy Carried by EM Radiation
- Each photon of wavelength l carries an energy E
given by - E hc/l
- where h is Plancks constant
- Notice that a photon of short wavelength
radiation carries more energy than a long
wavelength photon
30The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Wiens Law A Wavelength-Temperature Relation
- Heated bodies generally radiate across the entire
electromagnetic spectrum - There is one particular wavelength, lm, at which
the radiation is most intense and is given by
Wiens Law - lm k/T
- Where k is some constant and T is the
temperature of the body
31The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
- Wiens Law A Wavelength-Temperature Relation
- Note hotter bodies radiate more strongly at
shorter wavelengths - As an object heats, it appears to change color
from red to white to blue - Measuring lm gives a bodys temperature
- Careful Reflected light does not give the
temperature
32The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
blackbody
- Blackbodies and Wiens Law
- A blackbody is an object that absorbs all the
radiation falling on it - Since such an object does not reflect any light,
it appears black when cold, hence its name
33The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
blackbody
- Blackbodies and Wiens Law
- As a blackbody is heated, it radiates more
efficiently than any other kind of object - Blackbodies are excellent absorbers and emitters
of radiation and follow Wiens law
34The EM Spectrum Beyond Visible Light
blackbody
- Blackbodies and Wiens Law
- Very few real objects are perfect blackbodies,
but many objects (e.g., the Sun and Earth) are
close approximations - Gases, unless highly compressed, are not
blackbodies and can only radiate in narrow
wavelength ranges
35Atoms
Bohrs atom
- Structure of Atoms
- Nucleus Composed of densely packed neutrons and
positively charged protons - Cloud of negative electrons held in orbit around
nucleus by positive charge of protons - Typical atom size 10-10 m ( 1 Å 0.1 nm)
H Atom
36Atoms
Bohrs atom
- Structure of Atoms
- The electron orbits are quantized, can only have
discrete values and nothing in between - Quantized orbits is the result of the
wave-particle duality of matter - As electrons move from one orbit to another, they
change there energy is discrete amounts
H Atom
37Atoms
- The Chemical Elements
- An element is a substance composed only of atoms
that have the same number of protons in their
nucleus - A neutral element will contain an equal number of
protons and electrons - The chemical properties of an element is
determined by the number of electrons
38The Origin of Light
H Atom
- Energy Change in an Atom
- An atoms energy is increased if an electron
moves to an outer orbit the atom is said to be
excited - An atoms energy is decreased if an electron
moves to an inner orbit
39The Origin of Light
H Atom
- Conservation of Energy
- The energy change of an atom must be compensated
elsewhere Conservation of Energy - Absorption and emission of EM radiation are two
ways to preserve energy conservation - In the photon picture, a photon is absorbed as an
electron moves to a higher orbit and a photon is
emitted as an electron moves to a lower orbit
40Formation of a Spectrum
- The Spectrum
- The key to determining the composition and
conditions of an astronomical body - Spectroscopy is the technique to capture and
analyze a spectrum - Spectroscopy assumes that every atom or molecule
will have a unique spectral signature
41Formation of a Spectrum
- How a Spectrum is Formed
- Electron orbits are more properly thought of as
energy levels with the lowest energy level
corresponding to the smallest orbit - Wavelength of emitted (or absorbed) light is
calculated from the energy difference of the two
levels involved
42Formation of a Spectrum
absorption
- Types of Spectra
- Continuous spectrum
- Spectra of a blackbody
- Typical objects are solids and dense gases
43Formation of a Spectrum
absorption
- Types of Spectra
- Emissionline spectrum
- Produced by hot, tenuous gases
- Fluorescent tubes, aurora, and many interstellar
clouds are typical examples
44Formation of a Spectrum
absorption
- Types of Spectra
- Dark-line or absorptionline spectrum
- Light from blackbody passes through cooler gas
leaving dark absorption lines - Fraunhofer lines of Sun is an example
- Spectra may be depicted in a variety of ways
45The Doppler Shift
Doppler movie
- Doppler Shift
- If a source of light is set in motion relative to
an observer, its spectral lines shift to new
wavelengths in a phenomenon known as Doppler
shift - The shift in wavelength is given as
- Dl l lo lov/c
- where l is the observed (shifted) wavelength, lo
is the emitted wavelength, v is the source
non-relativistic radial velocity, and c is the
speed of light
46The Doppler Shift
Doppler movie
- An observed increase in wavelength is called a
redshift, and a decrease in observed wavelength
is called a blueshift (regardless of whether or
not the waves are visible) - Doppler shift is used to determine an objects
velocity
47Absorption in the Atmosphere
- Gases in the Earths atmosphere absorb
electromagnetic radiation to the extent that most
wavelengths from space do not reach the ground - Visible light, most radio waves, and some
infrared penetrate the atmosphere through
atmospheric windows, wavelength regions of high
transparency - Lack of atmospheric windows at other wavelengths
is the reason for astronomers placing telescopes
in space
48A wave of electromagnetic energy moves through
empty space at the speed of light, 299,792.5
kilometers per second. The wave carries itself
along by continually changing its electric energy
into magnetic energy and vice versa.
Back
49Photonsparticles of energystream away from a
light source at the speed of light.
Back
50The distance between crests defines the
wavelength, l , for any kind of wave, be it water
(top photo) or electromagnetic (bottom
illustration).
Back
51White light is spread into a spectrum by a prism.
Back
52The electromagnetic spectrum.
Back
53As a body is heated, the wavelength at which it
radiates most strongly, lm, shifts to shorter
wavelengths, a relation known as Wien's Law.
Thus the color of an electric stove burner
changes from red to yellow as it heats up. Note
also that as the object's temperature rises, the
amount of energy radiated increases at all
wavelengths.
Back
54Sketch of an atom's structure, showing electrons
orbiting the nucleus. The electrons are held in
orbit by the electrical attraction between their
negative charge and the positive charge of the
protons in the nucleus. Orbits are in reality
more like clouds.
Back
55Energy is released when an electron drops from an
upper to a lower orbit, causing the atom to emit
electromagnetic radiation.
Back
56An atom can absorb light, using the light's
energy to lift an electron from a lower to a
higher orbit. To be absorbed, the energy of the
light's photons must equal the energy difference
between the atom's electron orbits. In this
example, the green light's energy matches the
energy difference, but the red and blue light's
energy does not. Therefore only the green is
absorbed.
Back
57Sketch of a spectroscope and how it forms a
spectrum. Either a prism or grating may be used
to spread the light into its component colors.
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58Sketch of electron orbits in hydrogen and helium.
Back
59Emission of light from a hydrogen atom. The
energy of an electron dropping from an upper to
lower orbit is converted to light.
Back
60The emission spectra of hydrogen and of helium.
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61Gas between an observer and a source of light
that is hotter than the gas creates an
absorption-line spectrum. Atoms in the gas absorb
only those wavelengths whose energy equals the
energy difference between their electron orbits.
The absorbed energy lifts the electrons to upper
orbits. The lost light makes the spectrum darker
at the wavelengths where it is absorbed.
Back
62Types of spectra (A) continuous, (B)
emission-line, and (C) absorption-line.
Back
63(A) A radio spectrum of a cold interstellar
cloud. (Courtesy Doug McGonagle, FCRAO.) (B) An
X-ray spectrum of hot gas from an exploding star.
(Courtesy P. F. Winkler, Middlebury College.)
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64(A) The Doppler shift waves appear to shorten as
a source approaches and lengthen as it recedes.
(B) Doppler shift of sound waves from a passing
car. (C)Doppler shift of radar waves in a speed
trap. (D) A Slinky illustrates the shortening of
the space between its coils as its ends move
toward each other and a lengthening of the space
as the ends move apart.
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65Atmospheric absorption. Wavelength regions where
the atmosphere is essentially transparent, such
as the visible spectrum, are called atmospheric
windows. Wavelengths and atmosphere not drawn to
scale.
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