Title: Chapter 5: Light: The Cosmic Messenger
1Chapter 5Light The Cosmic Messenger
2What is Light?
- Light is radiative energy
- Energy is measured in Joules
- Power is measured in Watts 1 watt 1 joule/s
- The power a person uses in a day is about 10
Mjoules, equivalent to leaving a 100W bulb on all
day
3How Light Behaves
- Emission
- Absorption
- Transmission
- Reflection
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5If you pass white light through a prism, it
separates into its component colors.
R.O.Y. G. B.I.V
spectrum
6Duality of Light
- Light can behave as a particle and a wave
- In the 17th Century, Isaac Newton argued that
light was composed of little particles while
Christian Huygens suggested that light travels in
the form of waves. - In the 19th Century, Thomas Young demonstrated
that light bends slightly around corners and acts
like interfering waves.
7Thomas Youngs interference experiment
8Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell showed
mathematically in the 1860s that light must be a
combination of electric and magnetic fields.
9Light and Energy
- Photon energy Planks constant x speed of light
/ wavelength E h x f hc/? - As Energy goes up, frequency goes up, wavelength
gets smaller
10Peak color (wavelength) shifts to shorter
wavelengths as an objects is heated
11Peak color (wavelength) emitted depends on an
objects temperature
12Peak color (wavelength) shifts to shorter
wavelengths as an objects is heated
13The intensities of different emitted colors
reveal a stars temperature
- Wiens Law
- Wavelength is inversely proportional to
temperature - lmax (2.9 x 10-3) / TKelvin
- As Energy goes up, Temperature increases and
wavelength gets smaller, and frequency gets
greater
14What color is our 5800K Sun?
- The Sun emits all colors (wavelengths of
electromagnetic radiation) however, the colors
it emits most intensely are in the blue-green
part of the spectrum.
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16Each chemical element produces its own unique set
of spectral lines when it burns
17The Suns Spectrum
18The brightness of spectral lines depend on
conditions in the spectrums source
- Law 1 A hot object or a hot, dense gas produces
a continuous spectrum -- a complete rainbow of
colors with without any specific spectral lines.
(This is a black body spectrum.) - Law 2 A hot, rarefied gas produces an emission
line spectrum - a series of bright spectral lines
against a dark background. - Law 3 A cool gas in front of a continuous source
of light produces an absorption line spectrum - a
series of dark spectral lines among the colors of
the rainbow.
19Absorption Spectrum of Hydrogen Gas
20Kirchhoffs Laws
21Spectral lines occur when an electron jumps from
one energy level to another
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23We can determine a stars movement by observing
the shift in spectrum of the light from a star
24Spectral lines shift due to the relative motion
between the source and the observer
25Doppler Shifts
- Red Shift The distance between the observer and
the source is increasing - Blue Shift The distance between the observer and
the source is decreasing
26The Doppler shift allows astronomers to measure
radial velocity
27What can we learn by analyzing starlight?
- A stars temperature
- by peak wavelength
- A stars chemical composition
- by spectral analysis
- A stars radial velocity
- from Doppler shifts