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Materials

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Activity How Can radar See? Materials Polarized glasses (3-d movie glasses, or from Rainbow Symphony) Radiation The emission of energy as electromagnetic waves or ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Materials


1
Activity How Can radar See?
  • Materials
  • Polarized glasses (3-d movie glasses, or from
    Rainbow Symphony)

2
Part 1 Electromagnetic Spectrum
  • Radiation
  • The emission of energy as electromagnetic waves
    or as moving subatomic particles
  • Photon
  • A particle representing a quantum of light or
    other electromagnetic radiation. A photon carries
    energy proportional to the radiation frequency
    but has zero rest mass

3
  • Frequency
  • The rate at which something occurs or is repeated
    over a particular period of time or in a given
    sample.
  • Amplitude
  • The maximum extent of a vibration or oscillation,
    measured from the position of equilibrium

4
Examples of instruments
  • Radio
  • FM/AM/Shortwave radio, etc.
  • Microwaves
  • Microwave ovens, Radar
  • Infrared
  • Heat, remote controls, etc.
  • Visible
  • Ultraviolet (UV)
  • Produced by the sun, black lights
  • X-ray
  • Doctors office, etc.

5
Discussion
  • How are radar waves different from visible light
    waves?
  • Radar waves
  • have a longer wavelength larger distance between
    the crests of each wave
  • lower frequency
  • Visible light waves
  • Wavelengths are much smaller
  • Can be seen by the human eye

6
Radar review
  • What does radar stand for?
  • Radio Detecting and Ranging
  • What can we use it for?
  • Because microwaves, such as radar, can penetrate
    haze, light rain, snow, clouds and smoke, these
    waves are good for viewing the Earth from space

7
Part 2 Polarized Light
  • Brainstorming
  • Describe what you know about polarization
  • Students may or may not know what polarization
    is.
  • Take a few minutes to have students brainstorm
    what they think polarization is, and help them
    identify familiar objects that they may know
    (i.e. Polaroid camera, polarizing sunglasses).
  • Remind them that at this point, they are just
    putting their ideas down on paper.

8
Radar-Polarization connection
  • Radar
  • reflected off any surface
  • determine certain aspects of a surface not
    visible
  • Polarization /MiniRF Instrument
  • radar energy
  • measures the polarization of the radar energy as
    it is reflected off of a surface.

9
Vocab
  • Polarization is the term used to describe the way
    in which the electromagnetic wave oscillates as
    it travels along.
  • Vertically polarized waves will oscillate up and
    down as it moves forward
  • horizontally polarized waves will oscillate from
    side to side.

10
Circular Polarization
  • Other types of polarization are possible, for
    example circular polarization in which the wave
    oscillates in a circle as it moves along
  • (Demo You can use a slinky, long spring, or
    rope to emphasize these points).

11
Part 3 Polarizing Lenses
  • Activitypart 1
  • For the first part of this activity, you will
    need a set of polarizing filters.
  • We will be using the polarizing glasses through a
    company called Rainbow Symphony.
  • http//www.rainbowsymphony.com/3d-polarized-glasse
    s.html

12
Procedure (5 min)
  • Look through the lenses of one pair of glasses to
    see how they reduce the amount of light passing
    through.
  • Describe what you see
  • Next, use a second set of glasses, and put the
    lenses on top of each other and look through both
    together.
  • Rotate one lens by 90 degrees and the light
    passing through the two screens should be zero
    (i.e. you should see nothing).
  • Describe what you see
  • Why does the lens go dark?

13
Both horizontal and vertical components of the
light have been screened out
14
Polarizing Lenscont
  • For the second part of this activity, you will
    need to go outside and look at the reflected
    light off of a car windshield, leaves, etc.
  • Using polarized glasses you will observe 2
    things
  • How light can be reflected to show stress or
    strain in windows
  • How using a polarizer can affect the reflection
    of light off an object.
  • Materials
  • Polarized glasses

15
Outside Activity (10 min)
  • Before we begin looking at the reflected light
    from the car window, put the glasses on and look
    at the sky, trees or any other object.
  • What do you see?
  • Next, take the polarized glasses off and look at
    the windshield of a vehicle.
  • Do you notice anything unusual? Describe what
    you see.
  • Now put the polarized glasses on, while looking
    at the car windshield.
  • What has changed?
  • Do you notice any unusual patterns on the
    windows?
  • Does it change when you look at the cars
    windshield through a window of another vehicle?
  • Describe what you see

16
Whats going on
  • Light from the sky is reflected by the windshield
    of the other car at an angle, making it mostly
    horizontally polarized. The rear window is made
    of tempered glass.
  • Stress in the glass, left from its heat
    treatment, causes it to alter the polarization of
    light passing through it.
  • The stress in the rear window changes some of the
    horizontally polarized light into vertically
    polarized light that can pass through the
    glasses.
  • As a result, the regular pattern of the heat
    treatment becomes visible

17
Using polarized lenses outside
  • Polarizing filters, such as a pair of polarizing
    sunglasses, can be used to observe this effect by
    rotating the filter while looking through it at
    the reflection off of a distant horizontal
    surface.
  • At certain rotation angles, the reflected light
    will be reduced or eliminated.

18
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19
Additional Activities
  • Observe reflections elsewhere around you.
  • Rotate the glasses and vary the angle of viewing
    to vary the brightness.
  • Try looking at a reflection from a metallic
    surface, such as an ordinary mirror.
  • Do you notice any difference?

20
How does this relate to Mini-RF?
  • This image is a Mini-RF synthetic aperture radar
    (SAR) strip overlain on an Earth-based, Arecibo
    Observatory radar telescope image.
  • Mini RF
  • transmits a microwave pulse (radar) to the
    surface
  • circularly polarized radar signal (at microwave
    frequencies) and receives horizontally and
    vertically polarized returns.

21
  • This image describes how Mini RF receives this
    information from the ground track.
  • By measuring the type of reflected polarized
    energy that comes back to the instrument,
    scientists can determine what lies just below the
    surface of the moon.
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