Title: 1445 Introductory Astronomy I
11445 Introductory Astronomy I
- Chapter 3
- Light and Telescopes
- R. S. Rubins
Fall, 2008
2The Speed of Light 1
- Aristotle (ca. 360 BCE) thought the speed of
light to be infinite, while Galileo (ca.1600)
found it too fast to measure. - In 1675, the Danish astronomer, Ole Roemer, used
Newtons Laws to predict the eclipses of the
moons of Jupiter. His predicted times were
early when Jupiter was near conjunction, and late
when near opposition. - Believing Newtons Laws to be correct, he was
able to calculate a value for the speed of light,
which would have been accurate if the Sun-Jupiter
distance had been known precisely at that time. - Now known very precisely, the speed of light c in
space has the approximate value, - c 300,000 km/s ( 186,000 mi/s).
3The Speed of Light 2
- Roemers method (1675) compares the predicted
eclipse times for one of Jupiters moons, based
on Newtons Laws, with the measured times at
opposition and near conjunction.
4The Speed of Light 3
- The terrestrial method (ca. 1920) measures the
time for light to travel the 70 km round trip
from Mt. Wilson to Mt. Baldy using the equation c
x/t, where x is 70 km.
5Reflection of Light
- The angle of reflection r equals the angle of
incidence i.
6Refraction of Light
7General Properties of Light
- A light ray is a very narrow beam of light.
- Reflection is the rebound of a light ray off a
surface. - Refraction is the bending of a light ray when
passing from one transparent medium to another at
an oblique angle. - The denser the medium, the slower the speed of
light thus, the speed of light is slower in
glass than in air. - Dispersion is the separation of light into its
constituent colors. - The color of light depends on its frequency (and
wavelength). - Monochromatic light is light of a single
wavelength. - Interference, diffraction and polarization are
wave properties of light.
8Dispersion of White Light by a Prism
- The upper picture shows the variation of
wavelength with color. -
- The lower picture shows Newtons experimental
proof that the glass changes the direction of a
light-beam, but does not affect its color.
9Light Waves or Particles ?
There are two basic ways of transferring energy
in every-day life, either by particles or by
waves. In the 17th century, Newton considered
light to be particles, while the Dutch scientist,
Huygens, thought it to be waves. In 1801,
through the phenomenon of interference, Young
showed experimentally that light traveled as
waves. Wave properties of light Diffraction is
the bending of light behind an aperture or around
an obstacle. Interference is the combination of
two or more waves of the same type and wavelength
which meet at a point in space. Polarization is
the restriction of the vibration of a
(transverse) wave to a particular direction.
10Wave Motion
- The wavelength ? (in km) is the distance between
neighboring points on the wave which have the
same phase. - The frequency f (in Hz) is the number of crests
passing a given point per second. - The speed of the wave is given by v f ?.
- For light, the speed c 300,000 km/s.
11Interference of Two Like Waves
Constructive interference occurs when the
two waves are in phase, so that their crests
coincide.
Destructive interference occurs when the
two waves are 180o out of phase, so that the
crest of one wave coincides with the trough of
the other.
12 Double Slit Interference 5
smaller spacing
larger spacing
13Double Slit Interference 4
- Coming from the same source S0, the light passing
through slits slits S1 and S2 is coherent, a
requirement for interference. - The interference of the diffracted waves from S1
and S2 produces a set of interference fringes.
14Diffraction of Light
Diffraction, which is the bending of a wave
behind apertures and around obstacles, plays an
important role in double-slit interference.
The light passing through the narrow slit shown
in Fig (c) behaves as it does in double-slit
interference.
15Diffraction Grating 1
- A diffraction grating, which consists of
thousands of equally spaced fine lines ruled on a
small rectangular plastic slide, is used to give
very sharp interference maxima. - The figure shows how the spectra are sharpened
when the number of slits is increased from 2 in
Fig.(a) to 6 in Fig.(b).
16Grating Spectrometer
- The m 0 spectrum is observed when the telescope
is lined up with the collimator (? 0). - The m 1 spectra are observed by varying the
angle ? in both directions. - For the m 1 spectrum, the intensity maxima are
given by - ? d sin?.
17Dispersion by a Diffraction Grating
Emission line-spectrum
Continuous spectrum
- The m0 spectrum is not deviated.
- The diffracted spectra are denoted m 1 and m
2. - In the diffracted spectra, the red end (longer
wavelengths) is more deviated from the m0 line
than the blue.
18The Continuous Spectrum
19Emission Line-Spectrum of Sodium
The sharp spectral lines seen on the screen would
be observed only if the prism were replaced by a
grating.
20Emission Line-Spectra of some Elements
21Why The Sky is Blue
- Sunlight contains all the colors of the rainbow.
- The molecules of the Earths atmosphere scatter
the incoming molecules in all directions. The
blue (short wavelength) end of the spectrum is
scattered more than the red (long wavelength)
end. Thus, the sky looks blue, while the Sun
appears yellow, which corresponds to white light
minus the scattered blue. - At sunrise or sunset, the Suns rays take a
longer path through the atmosphere, so that more
of the sunlight is scattered, making the Sun
appear orange or red.
22The Electromagnetic Spectrum 1
23The Electromagnetic Spectrum 2
24The Electromagnetic Spectrum 3
- The EM spectrum extends from ?-ray wavelengths
(shorter than 10-15 m) to radio waves (longer
than 1000 km). - All EM radiations travel through space at the
speed of light c, differing only in their
wavelengths ? (and frequencies f). - While EM waves travel through space as waves,
their interaction with matter is as tiny packets
of energy, known as photons (Einstein, 1905). - The energy E of a photon is given by E hf, where
f is the frequency, or in practical units, by - E 1240/? ,
- where E is in eV (electron-volts) and ? is
in nm. - Short wavelength (high frequency) photons have
high energies, and vice-versa.
25Transparency of Earths Atmosphere
- Only visible light and radiowaves reach the
ground at all their wavelengths, while all
infrared rays reach high mountains.
26Refraction by a Converging Lens
- A converging (or convex) lens focuses light
entering the lens parallel to the axis at the
focal point F. - Off-axis rays focus at a point in the focal
plane.
27Focusing Light with a Converging Lens
28Chromatic Aberration 1
- Chromatic aberration in a lens causes blue end of
the visible spectrum to have a shorter focal
length than the red. - Chromatic aberration does not occur in mirrors.
29Chromatic Aberration 2
An achromatic combination lens made with two
different types of glass can greatly reduce
chromatic aberration by correcting for two
colors.
30Spherical Aberration in a Lens
- Spherical aberration refers to the fact that
the outermost rays striking a spherical lens or
mirror come to focus earlier than the central
rays.
31Spherical Aberration in a Mirror
- Spherical aberration occurs in a concave
mirror with a spherical reflecting surface.
32Parabolic Mirror
- Spherical abberation does not occur in a
mirror with a parabolic reflecting surface.
33Parallel Rays from a Distant Object
34Astronomical Telescope 1
- The magnification is given by M fo/fe , where
fo and fe are the focal lengths of objective and
eyepiece. - The length of the instrument is L fo fe.
35Astronomical Telescope 2
- The final image seen by an observer looking
through the eyepiece is inverted.
36Worlds Largest Refracting Telescope
- Built in the late 1800s, the telescope at the
Yerkes Observatory, near Chicago, has an
objective of diameter 40 inches.
37Astronomical Telescope 3
- Large objectives use parabolic mirrors because
- i. neither spherical aberration nor
chromatic aberration occur - ii. they weigh much less than large glass
lenses - iii. Unlike glass lenses, metal mirrors are
structurally stable.
38Effect of Twinkling Star-Field from the Ground
39Effect of Twinkling View from the HST
40Adaptive Optics and Interferometry 1
- Adaptive optics is a ground-based method of
compensating for atmospheric turbulence, which
causes small shifts in the position of a stars
image to occur, blurring the image and producing
twinkling. - In applying adaptive optics, a secondary mirror
is made up of small segments, each of which is
automatically adjustable, so that a reference
star (or artificial image, produced by a laser
beam) is kept in sharp focus. - This allows the telescope to continue to work at
its highest resolution, regardless of the
turbulence.
41Proposed OWL 100m Reflecting Telescope
42Example of Adaptive Optics
- The Cats Eye Nebula taken from the same
ground-based telescope, without (left) and with
(right) adaptive optics. - With adaptive optics, the proposed ground-based
100 m OWL (overwhelmingly large) telescope would
have a resolving power 40 times better than the
HST.
43Radio Telescopes 1
- Prior to 1930, all astronomy was done with
visible light. - The largest single radio telescope dish in the
world, in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, is 300 m in
diameter, but its resolution is appreciably less
than that of a large optical telescope. - Very high resolution radio telescopes link
individualtelescopes through a process known as
interferometry. - The Very Large Array (VLA), situated near
Socorro, NM, contains 27 concave reflecting
dishes, each 26 m in diameter, arranged along
three arms. - The Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), uses
radio telescopes thousands of miles apart, from
Hawaii to New Hampshire. - The downsides of such systems are their poor
light-gathering ability (sensitivity) and their
small fields-of-view.
44Keck Reflecting Telescopes, Hawaii
- While each telescope singly is equivalent to
a 10 m reflecting telescope, when linked together
they are equivalent to a single 85 m telescope.
45VLA 1
46VLA 2
47Radio Telescopes 2
- The new Green Bank Telescope (GBT) in West
Virginia has a dish about 100 m in diameter, and
is the worlds largest rotatable radio telescope.
48Optical and Radio Photos of Saturn
- To be displayed as a photo, the radio signal must
be shown in false color. - The most intense radio emission is red, followed
by yellow and blue, while black means that there
is no measurable signal.
49Radio Telescope at Cambridge U.
- With this detector strung together with 120
miles of wire and cable, Jocelyn Bell in 1967
discovered the pulsar.
50Telescopes at Other Wavelengths
- Water vapor is the main absorber of infrared
radiation from space, so that surface IR
telescopes must be placed in exceptionally dry
locations, such as at the Summit of Mauna Kea in
Hawaii. - However, the best locations for IR , UV , X-ray
and gamma-ray telescopes are on orbiting
satellites. - Normal methods of reflection do not work for X
rays and gamma rays. - X-rays, which can be reflected when grazing a
surface, are focused with a grazing incidence
X-ray telescope. - High energy particle-physics techniques are used
in building gamma ray instruments.