Title: Reading
1Reading
Unit 26, 27, 28, 29, 30
2The Michelson-Morley Experiment
- Two scientists devised an experiment to detect
the motion of the Earth through the aether - Light should move slower in the direction of the
Earths motion through space - Detected no difference in speed!
- No aether, and the speed of light seemed to be a
constant!
3Einsteins Insights
- Albert Einstein started from the assumption that
the speed of light was a constant, and worked out
the consequences - Length does indeed contract in the direction of
motion, by a fraction equal to the Lorentz factor - Time stretches as well, also by the Lorentz
factor - Moving clocks run slow
- Moving objects reduce their length in the
direction of motion
4Special Relativity
- Time dilation and length contraction depend on
the observer! - To an observer on Earth, the spacecrafts clock
appears to run slow, and the ship looks shorter - To an observer on the ship, the Earth appears to
be moving in slow-motion, and its shape is
distorted. - The passage of time and space are relative!
5Possibilities for Space Travel
- Example A spacecraft leaves Earth, heading for
a star 70 light-years away, traveling at .99c - To an observer on Earth, it takes the spacecraft
140 years to get to the star, and back again - To passengers on the ship, it only takes 20 years
for the round-trip! - This means that high speed travel to the stars is
possible, but comes at the cost of friends and
family
6General Relativity Mass Warps Space
- Mass warps space in its vicinity
- The larger the mass, the bigger dent it makes
in space - Objects gravitationally attracted to these
objects can be seen as rolling downhill towards
them - If the mass is large enough, space can be so
warped that objects entering it can never leave
a black hole is formed.
7Another underappreciated female in science?
Mileva Maric
Einstein Nobel Prize was for photoeffect, which
was the theme of diploma work by Mileva. To what
extend she inspired Einstein or collaborated with
him is a subject of debates.
8Telescopes
- Telescopes have been used for hundreds of years
to collect light from the sky and focus it into
an eyepiece. An astronomer would then look
through this eyepiece at planets, nebulae, etc. - The human eye is not very sensitive to dim light,
and was replaced in astronomy by the film camera. - Film is sensitive to only around 10 of the
impinging light, and is usually replaced by a
9The Charge-Coupled Device (CCD)
- The CCD, similar to those found in commercial
digital cameras and phones, utilizes the
photoelectric effect to collect around 75 of the
visible light that is focused on it! - It has revolutionized astronomy images can be
recorded and downloaded to a computer anywhere in
the world for analysis
- The science of developing new methods for
sensing, focusing and imaging light in astronomy
is called instrumentation
10Outside the visible spectrum
- Observations in other wavelengths require
instrumentation to be lifted above the Earths
atmosphere. - X-ray, Gamma ray and infrared wavelength
telescopes are currently in orbit!
- Many objects of astronomical interest are visible
only in wavelengths other than the visible! - Much can be learned from studying a star, planet
or nebula in multiple wavelengths. - Radio telescopes can be used from the ground to
image pulsars and other bodies
11Modern Telescopes
- Modern telescopes are designed to collect as much
light as possible, and must be built to exacting
standards. - Collected light is of nanometer wavelength, so
the telescopes must be extremely precise to keep
the waves coherent for maximum efficiency
12Radio Telescopes
- Radio telescopes, like the one in Arecibo, Puerto
Rico, collect radio waves from astronomical
objects and events
13Radio Telescopes
- Radio telescope arrays to achieve large
collecting areas
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (U.S.A.)
14Size Matters!
- Aperture size is very important when collecting
light! - A large collecting area allows astronomers to
image dim and distant objects. - For a telescope with an aperture a distance D in
diameter,
15Refracting Telescopes
- Telescopes that use lenses to focus light are
called refracting telescopes, or refractors. - Large refractors are difficult to build!
- Glass is heavy, and glass lenses must be
supported only by their rims, a difficult
engineering problem - Glass sags under its own weight, defocusing the
light! - Refractors suffer from chromatic aberration, a
blurring effect due to changes in the focal plane
of the lens for different wavelengths of light
16Reflecting Telescopes
- Reflecting telescopes, or reflectors, use a
curved mirror to focus light - Mirrors can be supported from behind, and so can
be much larger than refractors - Larger sizes mean that more light can be
collected and focused, allowing astronomers to
image dimmer or more distant objects - Most modern telescopes are reflectors.
17Different styles of reflectors
18X-Ray reflectors
- X-rays only reflect at glancing angles, otherwise
they are absorbed or pass through the mirror! - X-Ray mirrors are designed to gently reflect the
incoming photons, focusing them at the end of a
long tube-shaped array of mirrors
19Chandra
20Very Large Mirrors
- Reflectors can be made very large if multiple
mirrors are used as the primary mirror. - The Keck Telescope uses 36 large mirrors to
create a single huge primary. - The positions of the mirrors are precisely
measured by lasers, and can be individually
adjusted to keep them perfectly aligned.
21Diffraction and Resolution
- Some stars that appear to be single bodies to the
unaided eye are, when viewed through a telescope,
found to be two separate stars. - The telescope is able to separate the two stars,
while the human eye is not. - The telescope, then, has better resolution than
the human eye. - The telescopes resolution is better because it
has a larger aperture, and light is diffracted
less as it passes through it.
- Diffraction is a rippling effect due to the
finite size of an aperture. - Light waves approach the aperture as flat plane
waves, similar to the straight water waves seen
above. - As the waves pass through the aperture, the waves
become curved.
22Diffraction Effects
- Diffracted light waves can interfere with, or
cancel, each other. - This results in a diffraction pattern, a blurring
of the image as it passes through the telescope. - Larger apertures have less diffraction, and
therefore higher resolution than smaller
apertures. - For observing light of wavelength ?nm, the
smallest separation angle ?arcsec a telescope can
resolve is related to the telescope aperture Dcm
by
23Interferometers
- To counter diffraction effects (and build
telescopes with higher resolution), astronomers
use interferometers. - Signals from these arrays of widely-separated
telescopes are added together to create images
with very high resolution. - In fact, the resolution is equivalent to that of
a single telescope with an aperture as large as
the separation in the array!
24Before and After
- Before
- What looks like a single star
- After
- is actually two stars!
25Atmospheric Absorption
- The Earths atmosphere absorbs most of the
radiation incident on it from space - This is a good thing for life high energy
photons would sterilize the planet! - This is not a good thing for astronomy, however!
- Visible, radio and some infrared wavelengths are
not absorbed readily by the atmosphere - Optical and radio telescopes work well from the
ground - Gamma Rays, X-rays, and UV photons are absorbed
- Observatories for these wavelengths must be kept
above the Earths atmosphere!
26Ground- and Space-based Observatories
27Light Pollution
- Ambient light from cities are a real problem for
optical astronomy. - This light pollution washes out images in
telescopes. - Research telescopes are built far from cities to
reduce the effects of light pollution - It is getting harder to find good locations for
telescopes!
28Atmospheric Effects
- Air refracts light just like glass or water, but
to a lesser degree. - Cool air refracts light more than warm air
- Pockets of cool air in the atmosphere create
moving lenses in the sky, shifting the light rays
randomly - This causes a twinkling effect, called
scintillation. - A stable atmosphere causes less scintillation
- We say the seeing is good.
29Adaptive Optics
- Some observatories measure the amount of
atmospheric turbulence with lasers, and then
adjust the mirrors in their telescopes with tiny
motors to eliminate the effect - This technique is called adaptive optics
30Spitzer Space Telescope
James Web Space telescope
31Edwin Hubble
Hubble Telescope
32Observatories in Space