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Chapter 4 Radiation and Spectra

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Title: Chapter 4 Radiation and Spectra


1
Chapter 4Radiation and Spectra
The Sun in ultraviolet
2
Radiation from Space ? Information from the Stars
3
The Nature of Light
  • At least 95 of the celestial information we
    receive is in the form of light.
  • Astronomers have devised many techniques to
    decode as much of the encoded information as
    possible from the small amount of light that
    reaches Earth.
  • This includes information about the object's
    temperature, motion, chemical composition, gas
    density, surface gravity, shape, structure, and
    more!

4
The Nature of Light (contd)
  • Most of the information in light is revealed by
    using spectroscopy
  • Spectroscopy is the separation of light into its
    different constituent colors (or wavelengths) for
    analysis.
  • The resulting components are called the spectrum
    of the light.

5
Electric and Magnetic Fields
  • Light is composed of electric fields and magnetic
    fields.
  • Electric charges and magnets alter the region of
    space around them so that they can exert forces
    on distant objects.
  • This altered space is called a force field (or
    just a field).

6
Electromagnetism
  • Connection between electric and magnetic fields
    was discovered in the 19th century.
  • A moving electric charge or an electric current
    creates a magnetic field.
  • Coils of wire are used to make the large
    electromagnets used in car junk yards or the tiny
    electromagnets in your telephone receiver.
  • Electric motors used to start your car or spin a
    computer's hard disk around are other
    applications of this phenomenon.

7
How it works
  • A changing magnetic field creates electrical
    current---an electric field.
  • Concept used in power generators---large coils of
    wire are made to turn in a magnetic field
  • The coils of wire experience a changing magnetic
    field and electricity is produced.
  • Computer disks and audio/video tapes encode
    information in magnetic patterns...
  • When the magnetic disk or tape material passes by
    small coils of wire, electrical currents/fields
    are produced.

8
James Clerk Maxwell
  • Born/Educated in Scotland
  • Lived 18311879
  • Achieved a synthesis of knowledge of electricity
    and magnetism of his time.
  • Hypothesis
  • If a changing magnetic field can make an electric
    field, then a changing electric field should make
    a magnetic field.

9
Electric and Magnetic Fields
  • Consequence
  • Changing electric and magnetic fields should
    trigger each other.
  • The changing fields move at a speed equal to the
    speed of light.
  • Maxwells conclusion.
  • Light is an electromagnetic wave.
  • Later experiments confirmed Maxwell's theory.

10
The electric and magnetic fields oscillate at
right angles to each other and the combined wave
moves in a direction perpendicular to both of the
electric and magnetic field oscillations.
11
Electromagnetic Radiation
  • Light, electricity, and magnetism are
    manifestations of the same thing called
    electromagnetic radiation.
  • Electromagnetic radiation is a form of energy.
  • This energy exists in many forms not detectable
    by our eyes such as infrared (IR), radio, X-rays,
    ultraviolet (UV), and gamma rays.

12
EM Waves General Properties
  • Travels through empty space.
  • Most other types of waves dont
  • The speed of light (EM radiation) is constant in
    space.
  • All forms of light have the same speed of 299,800
    kilometers/second in space
  • This number is abbreviated as c.
  • C f?, f c/?, ? c/f

13
Wave Characteristics (1)
  • Amplitude (A)
  • A measure of the strength/size of the wave.
  • Period (P)
  • Duration of a cycle
  • Units year, day, hours, seconds,
  • Frequency (f)
  • Rate of repetition of a periodic phenomenon.
  • f1/P
  • Units Hertz (Hz), or cycle/s.

14
Period/Frequency Examples
Phenomenon Period Frequency
Earths orbit around the Sun 365 days 0.00274 days-1
Earths rotation 1 day or 86400 sec 1 day-1 or 1.16x10-5 Hz
Electrical Power (US) 0.0167 sec 60 Hz
Blue light 1.67x10-15 sec 6.0x1014 Hz
15
Wave Characteristics (2)
  • Wavelength (l)
  • Size of one cycle of the wave in space.
  • Units meter (m), centimeter (cm), micrometer
    (mm), nanometer (nm), angstrom (A).
  • Velocity (v)
  • Speed at which the wave propagate through space.
  • v f x l
  • Units m/s, miles/hour, km/hour, etc.

16
Distance Units
  • 1 meter 1 m
  • 100 cm (centimeter)
  • 1000 mm (millimeter)
  • 1000000 mm (micrometer)
  • 1000000000 nm (nanometer)
  • 10000000000 Ã… (Angstrom)

17
Visible Light
18
Color Composition
  • White light is made of different colors
    (wavelengths).
  • White light passing through a prism or
    diffraction grating, is spread out into its
    different colors.
  • First discovered by Newton

19
Light Dispersion by refraction
  • Refraction Angle or dispersion function of the
    wavelength (color)

20
Max Plancks Photon
  • Max Planck (lived 1858--1947)
  • Discovered that if one considers light as
    packets of energy called photons, one can
    accurately explain the shape of continuous
    spectra.
  • A photon is a particle of electromagnetic
    radiation.
  • Bizarre though it may be, light is both a
    particle and a wave.
  • Whether light behaves like a wave or like a
    particle depends on how the light is observed
  • it depends on the experimental setup!

21
Albert Einsteins Photon Energy Interpretation.
  • Albert Einstein (lived 1879--1955)
  • A few years after Planck's discovery Albert
    Einstein found a very simple relationship between
    the energy of a light wave (photon) and its
    frequency
  • Energy of light h ? f (h ? c)/ l
  • where h is a universal constant of nature called
    Planck's constant'' 6.63 ? 10-34 Jsec.

22
Characterizing Light
  • We now have three ways to characterize
    electromagnetic radiation
  • wavelength
  • frequency
  • energy
  • Astronomers use these interchangeably.
  • We also divide the spectrum of all possible
    wavelengths/frequencies/energies into bands that
    have similar properties. Light is the most
    familiar of these.

23
Visible Spectrum
Small wavelength High frequency High energy
large wavelength low frequency low energy
Remember the Spectrum ROY G BIV
24
The Full Spectrum
  • From the highest to lowest energy
  • Gamma rays
  • X-rays
  • Ultraviolet
  • Visible
  • Infrared
  • Microwave
  • Radio

25
EM Waves General Properties (contd)
  • A wavelength of light is defined similarly to
    that of water waves
  • distance between crests or between troughs.
  • Visible light (what your eye detects)
  • has wavelengths 400-800 nanometers. 1 nm 10-9
    m.
  • Radio wavelengths are often measured in
    centimeters 1 centimeter 10-2 meter 0.01
    meter.
  • The abbreviation used for wavelength is the Greek
    letter lambda l

26
The Full E-M Spectrum
27
EM Radiation Reaching Earth
  • Not all wavelengths of light from space make it
    to the surface.
  • Only long-wave UV, visible, parts of the IR and
    radio bands make it to surface.
  • More IR reaches elevations above 9,000 feet (2765
    meters) elevation.
  • That is one reason why modern observatories are
    built on top of very high mountains.

28
Earths atmosphere is a shield
  • Blocks gamma rays, X-rays, and most UV.
  • Good for the preservation of life on the planet
  • An obstacle for astronomers who study the sky in
    these bands.
  • Blocks most of the IR and parts of the radio.
  • Astronomers unable to detect these forms of
    energy from celestial objects from the ground
  • Must resort to very expensive satellite
    observatories in orbit.

29
Types of Spectra
  • Continuous spectra consist of all frequencies
    (colors) - the thermal or blackbody spectrum is
    the most common example we will see.
  • Absorption line spectra are continuous spectra
    with certain missing certain frequencies.
  • Emission line spectra are a series of discrete
    frequencies (with or without a continuous
    spectra).
  • Often astronomers deal with combinations of the
    above.

30
Black Body Spectrum
31
Star Color vs. Temperature
32
Discrete Spectra
  • Close examination of the spectra from the Sun and
    other stars reveals that the rainbow of colors
    has many dark lines in it, called absorption
    lines.
  • They are produced by the cooler thin gas in the
    upper layers of the stars absorbing certain
    colors of light produced by the hotter dense
    lower layers.
  • The spectra of hot, thin (low density) gas clouds
    are a series of bright lines called emission
    lines.
  • In both of these types of spectra you see
    spectral features at certain, discrete
    wavelengths (or colors) and no where else.

33
Absorption Line Spectrum
34
Spectra
  • The type of spectrum you see depends on the
    temperature of the thin gas.
  • If the thin gas is cooler than the thermal source
    in the background, you see absorption lines.
  • Since the spectra of stars show absorption lines,
    it tells you that the density and temperature of
    the upper layers of a star is lower than the
    deeper layers.
  • In a few cases you can see emission lines on top
    of the thermal spectrum. This is produced by thin
    gas that is hotter than the thermal source in the
    background.

35
Spectra (contd)
  • The spectrum of a hydrogen-emission nebula
    (nebula'' gas or dust cloud) is just a series
    of emission lines without any thermal spectrum
    because there are no stars visible behind the hot
    nebula.
  • Some objects produce spectra that are a
    combination of a thermal spectrum, emission
    lines, and absorption lines simultaneously!

36
Spectra (contd)
37
The Structure of the Atom
38
Bohr atom
  • Explanation for the discrete line spectra
  • Niels Bohr (lived 1885--1962) provided the
    explanation in the early 20th century.
  • Electrons only exist in certain energy levels and
    as long as an electron stays in a particular
    energy level, it doesnt emit any energy
    (photons).
  • If an electron changes energy levels, it emits or
    absorbs energy in the form of a photon.
  • Set of energies (light frequencies) uniquely
    identify the type of atom!

39
Bohrs Model
  • In Bohr's model of the atom, the massive but
    small positively-charged protons and massive but
    small neutral neutrons are found in the tiny
    nucleus.
  • The small, light negatively-charged electrons
    move around the nucleus in certain specific
    orbits (energy levels).
  • In a neutral atom the number of electrons the
    number of protons.
  • The arrangement of an atom's energy levels
    (orbits) depends on the number of protons (and
    neutrons) in the nucleus and the number of
    electrons orbiting the nucleus.
  • Because every type of atom has a unique
    arrangement of energy levels, they produce a
    unique pattern of absorption or emission lines.

40
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41
Isotopes
42
How is light produced?
43
Absorption Line Spectra
44
Doppler Effect
  • The wave nature of light means there will be a
    shift in the spectral lines of an object if it is
    moving.
  • Sound Waves pitch ? frequency of wave
  • Changes the pitch of the sound coming from
    something moving toward you or away from you
  • train whistle, police siren
  • Sounds from objects moving toward you are at a
    higher pitch because the sound waves are
    compressed together, shortening the wavelength of
    the sound waves.
  • Sounds from objects moving away from you are at a
    lower pitch because the sound waves are stretched
    apart, lengthening the wavelength.

45
Sound Waves
  • Spread uniformly from a sound source
  • Circles -- crests of the sound waves
  • Think of waves spreading from a pebble dropped
    into a pool

46
Doppler Shift
Moving towards Short wavelength
Moving away longer wavelength
47
Doppler Shift ? Speed of Source
48
Red shift, Blue shift
  • Motion of the light source causes the spectral
    lines to shift positions.
  • Which way the spectral lines shift tells you if
    the object is moving toward or away from you.
  • Blue shift If the object is moving toward you,
    the waves are compressed, so their wavelength is
    shorter. The lines are shifted to shorter (bluer)
    wavelengths.
  • Red shift If the object is moving away from you,
    the waves are stretched out, so their wavelength
    is longer. The lines are shifted to longer
    (redder) wavelengths.
  • The doppler effect will not affect the overall
    color of an object unless it is moving at a
    significant fraction of the speed of light (VERY
    fast!)

49
Doppler Shifted Spectra
50
Doppler Shift (5)
51
Doppler Shift (6)
52
Expanding Universe
  • The doppler effect tells us about the relative
    motion of stars with respect to us.
  • The spectral lines of nearly all of the galaxies
    in the universe are shifted to the red end of the
    spectrum.
  • These galaxies are moving away from our Milky Way
    galaxy.
  • This is evidence for the expansion of the
    universe.
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