Title: Quiz 1
1Quiz 1
- Each quiz sheet has a different 5-digit
symmetric number which must be filled in (as
shown on the transparency, but NOT the same
one!!!!!) - Please hand in both the exam and the answer
sheets with your name on both - Question/answer sheets will be handed back on
Wednesday after class - Please remain seated until we begin collecting
(20-25 minutes after start) - Class after quiz
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3Why is the sky blue ?
The atmosphere scatters the blue light more than
red light
4Light and Matter
- Light is electromagnetic energy, due to
interaction of electrical charges - Matter is made of atoms equal number of
positive and negative particles - An atom is the smallest particle of an element
natural element H to U - Atom ? Nucleus (protons neutrons), with
orbiting electrons - No. of protons in nucleus Atomic Number
- Science of light ? Spectroscopy
5Radiation and Spectroscopy
- Light is electromagnetic energy
- Propagates as both particles and waves
- Photons particles of light
- Wavelength Velocity / Frequency
6Light is electromagnetic waveDoes not require a
medium to propagate, unlike water or sound
Wavelength is the distance between successive
crests or troughs
7 WAVES Frequency, Wavelength, Speed
Frequency (f) ( waves/second)
Frequency f is the number of waves passing a
point per second
Speed wavelength x frequency ? c
l f
8Units of wavelength and frequency
- Frequency is the number of cycles per second
- Since speed of light is constant, higher the
frequency the shorter the wavelength and
vice-versa - Wavelengths are measured in Angstroms 1A
1/100,000,000 cm 1/10 nanometer (nm) - The higher the frequency the more energetic the
wave - Wavelength (or frequency) defines radiation or
color -
9Prisms disperse light into its component colors
Red-Violet
Prism
10Visible Light
- Forms a narrow band within the electromagnetic
spectrum ranging from gamma rays to radio waves - Human eye is most sensitive to which color?
- Yellow. Why?
11Light Electromagnetic SpectrumFrom Gamma Rays
to Radio Waves
Gamma X-Ray UV Visible
Gamma rays are the most energetic (highest
frequency, shortest wavelength), Radio waves are
the least energetic.
12Q1, AU15, A1143, Pradhan Curve 8
D
B
C
A
E
13Decreasing Wavelength OR Increasing Frequency
14Visible light spectrum Each color is defined by
its wavelength, frequency or energy
Red - Blue ? 7000 - 4000 Angstroms ( 1 nm
10 A, 1 A 10-8 cm) Blue light is more
energetic than red light Light also behaves like
particles called photons Photon energy,
frequency, wavelength E h f hc/l Plancks
Law (h is a number known as Plancks constant)
15Matter and Particles of Light Quantum Theory
- Light (energy) and matter in motion behave both
as waves and particles - Wave-Particle Duality - Quantum Theory
- Particles of light are called photons E hf
hc/l - Photons of a specific wavelength l may be
absorbed or emitted by atoms in matter - Matter is made of different natural elements
lightest Hydrogen (1 proton), heaviest Uranium
(92 protons) - Smallest particle of an element is atom, made up
of a nucleus (protons and neutrons), and orbiting
electrons - Electrons and protons attract as opposite
electrical charges, NOT gravitationally like
planets and Sun
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17The simplest atom Ordinary Hydrogen
Resemblance to planets orbiting the Sun
is superficial !
Electrons also move both as particles and waves
p positively charged e negatively
One proton in the center (nucleus) and one
electron in orbits of definite energy Ordinary H
has no neutrons, but heavy hydrogen has one
neutron in the nucleus
18Absorption and emission of photons by H-atom
An electron may absorb or emit light photons at
specific wavelength
Wavelength (n 3 ? n 2) 6562 Angstroms (RED
Color)
Energy of the photon must be exactly equal to the
energy difference between the two orbits
19file///E/Univ7e/content/ch05/0503002.html
20Energy Level Diagram of 1H
Continuum
21Photons of all other energies (wavelengths) are
ignored and pass on by unabsorbed.
22Larger Jump More Energy Bluer Wavelength
23Series of spectral lines of Hydrogen
24Wavelengths of series of lines from Hydrogen
25Spectrum of a Fluorescent Light
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27Characteristic spectra of elements
Each element has a unique set of spectral lines,
thus enabling its identification in the source.
Observations of spectra of different elements in
a source (planet, star, galaxy etc.) yields its
chemical composition
28Continuous, Absorption, and Emission spectra of a
source
Continuous spectrum covers wavelengths in a given
range absorption or emission spectrum consists
of dark or bright lines respectively at definite
wavelengths
29Brightness and Temperature
- Brightness is related to the total energy
emitted, or the luminosity of an object - The energy emitted is related to the temperature
of the object - B s T4 (s is a constant)
- Stefan-Boltzmann Law
30Color Indicates Temperature and Energy of the
Source
Blackbody Perfect absorber and emitter Of
radiation at a given Temperature T
Surface T (Sun) 5600 K (Mercury)
800 K
Objects generally emit radiation at all
wavelengths, but mostly at one peak Wavelength
depending on their temperature (e.g. blue hot,
red cool)
31TEMPERATURE SCALES
Astronomers usually use the Kelvin Scale
Room Temp 300 K 27 C 81 F
K C 273 C (F - 32) x 5/9 (F - 30)
/ 2 F (C x 9/5) 32 C x 2 30
32Brightness decreases inversely as the square of
the distance
B1
B1/4
B1/9
33The Doppler Effect
- Why does the pitch of a police siren differ
when, say, a police car is approaching you, or
when you are running away from the police (not
recommended) ? - The frequency (the number of sound waves per
second) is higher when approaching, and smaller
when receding from the source
34Doppler Effect in Sound
Low Pitch (long waves)
High Pitch (short waves)
35The Doppler Effect
Velocity c frequency (f) x wavelength (l)
36Doppler Shift of Wavelengths
- What about the wavelength?
- What about light?
- Shorter wavelength ? Blue-shift,
- Longer wavelength ? Red-shift
- We can determine the velocity of astronomical
objects, moving away or towards the Earth, by
measuring the wavelength of light from the object - Observed red-shift of galaxies all over the sky
shows that galaxies are moving away from one
another ? the Universe is expanding (Hubbles
Law)
37Hubble Diagram Distribution of Galaxies
38Hubbles Law v HodVelocity increases with
distance
39Expanding Universe
- Hubbles law ? Universe is expanding
- Universe had a beginning !
- How long ago? Distance/Velocity time !
- Ho 71 Km/sec/Mpc (units of v/d 1/t)
- Age of the universe 1/Ho (units of time)
- Big Bang !! About 13.7 billion years ago
- How does one determine distances?
- Redshift
40Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Universal
and Uniform Radiation
41CMB Properties
- The entire universe is filled with extremely
uniform radiation - CMB radiation corresponds to a fixed temperature
of 2.73 K (-270.3 oC or -428.9 oF) - Blackbody uniform temperature oven
- CMB radiation is also isotropic ? same in all
directions - But with extremely slight variations immediately
following the Big Bang due to matter
42Distribution of Matter in Galaxy
- Stars rotate about the center of galaxy
- Velocity determined by gravity mass Mc and
distance Rc from the center - KE PE
- ½ mstar v2 G Mc mstar / Rc
- Velocity v should decrease with radius Rc
- Surprise !
43Evidence of Dark Matter Rotation Curves of
Galaxies
44Dark Matter Halo
- Rotation curves are flat out to distances beyond
observable galaxies - Ergo Galaxies have dark matter haloes
- What is dark matter?