Title: Spectroscopy
1Spectroscopy
Astronomers can learn an immense amount from the
details of lines in the spectrum of light coming
from planets and stars.
- This tool is used by chemists, biologists,
physicists and all of the other natural sciences. - It is based on the quantum or particle (photon)
nature of light.
2Spectral Lines
- By the mid 19th century chemists noticed specific
colors of light coming from particular gases. - Careful measurements indicated each element or
compound produced a
UNIQUE SET of EMISSION LINES
equivalent to FINGERPRINTS identifying the
element . - Spectra of the SUN and other STARS showed
emission at most frequencies, but distinct dark
bands, or ABSORPTION LINES, were also detected.
3Stellar and Chemical Spectra
4What are the three basic types of spectra?
Continuous Spectrum
Emission Line Spectrum
Absorption Line Spectrum
Spectra of astrophysical objects are usually
combinations of these three basic types how they
arise is described by Gustav Kirchhofs Laws.
5Continuous Spectrum
- Example The spectrum of a common (incandescent)
light bulb spans all visible wavelengths, without
interruption. (stars interior) - A hot solid, liquid or dense gas produces a
continuous thermal spectrum (Kirchhofs 1st Law)
6Emission Line Spectrum
- A thin or low-density cloud of gas emits light
only at specific wavelengths that depend on its
composition and temperature, producing a spectrum
with bright emission lines (Kirchhofs 2nd Law).
7Absorption Line Spectrum
- A cloud of gas between us and a light bulb can
absorb light of specific wavelengths, leaving
dark absorption lines in the spectrum Kirchhofs
3rd Law - Illustrating_Kirchhofs_Laws Applet
8What kind of spectrum does a hot solid produce?
- Emission (bright lines)
- Absorption (dark lines)
- Continuous (all the colors of the rainbow)
- Infrared
- Ultraviolet
9What kind of spectrum does a hot solid produce?
- Emission (bright lines)
- Absorption (dark lines)
- Continuous (all the colors of the rainbow)
- Infrared
- Ultraviolet
10By looking at the light of a hot, solid object,
you can tell
- Its temperature
- What it is made of
- Both 1 and 2
- Neither 1 nor 2, without some additional
information
11By looking at the light of a hot, solid object,
you can tell
- Its temperature
- What it is made of
- Both 1 and 2
- Neither 1 nor 2, without some additional
information
12Origin of Spectral Lines
- Those in the radio, mm, IR, visible, UV and most
X-ray are due to
QUANTUM TRANSITIONS BY ELECTRONS IN ATOMS
and MOLECULES (Gamma-rays
usually come from quantum transitions in the
nuclei of atoms.) - ABSORPTION LINES ARISE FROM PHOTONS BEING
ABSORBED BY ATOMS AND EXCITING ELECTRONS TO
HIGHER LEVELS. - EMISSION LINES ARISE FROM ELECTRONS DROPPING
DOWN TO LOWER ENERGY LEVELS, EMITTING PHOTONS.
13Atomic Structure
Helium 2 p 2 n Nuclei -- protons and neutrons
with essentially all the mass of the
atom. Electrons are in orbitals which define
atomic energy levels-- essentially fill the
volume. Carbon 6 p 6 n
14Atomic Energy Levels
Classical model
Probabalistic electron cloud-- wave function
15Atomic Transitions
16Energy Level Transitions
- The only allowed changes in energy are those
corresponding to a transition between energy
levels
Allowed
Not Allowed
17Energy is Conserved in Atomic Transitions
- E2 - E1 h?
- Is the equation of CONSERVATION OF ENERGY FOR
PHOTO-EXCITATION
or PHOTOABSORPTION. - In denser gases frequent collisions between
atoms shift observed wavelengths (Doppler effect)
and smear out (broaden) the lines. - Once the density is high enough, the spectral
lines blur into a CONTINUOUS SPECTRUM.
18Atomic Transitions
19 Exciting Atoms
- ELECTRONS can be EXCITED THROUGH
either - PHOTO-EXCITATION (PHOTO-ABSORPTION), or
- COLLISIONAL EXCITATION (atom collides with
another atom or electron) - Here conservation of energy can be expressed
as E1 KE1 E2 KE2,
with E the
electronic potential energy of the atom and KE
the kinetic energy of the colliding atom or
electron. -
20De-exciting Atoms
- SPONTANEOUS (PHOTO-DE-EXCITATION) or
PHOTO-EMISSION - COLLISIONAL DE-EXCITATION (no photon out)
- STIMULATED PHOTOEMISSION, really requires 3
energy levels
a photon reminds an
electron to drop to the middle level after
another source of energy pumped many electrons
the high level - amplifying the original photon via a chain
reaction these photons are in phase, or
COHERENT (via constructive interference) yields
LASERS and MASERS. - Light or Microwave Amplification through
Stimulated Emission of Radiation
21Peer Instruction QuestionWhat can cause an
electron to jump from a low-energy orbital to a
higher-energy one?
- A photon of light is emitted
- A photon of light is absorbed
- The atom collides with an electron
- Both 2 and 3
- Both 1 and 3
22What can cause an electron to jump from a
low-energy orbital to a higher-energy one?
- A photon of light is emitted
- A photon of light is absorbed
- The atom collides with an electron
- Both 2 and 3
- Both 1 and 3
23Spectral Lines Sodium
Emission and absorption lines from Na gas Yellow
Doublet (two nearby wavelengths)
24Atomic Transitions Hydrogen
- Lyman series involve transitions to the ground
state (all UV lines) - Balmer series involve transitions to first
excited state (visible and UV)
25- We should not expect to see an optical emission
line spectrum from a very cold cloud of hydrogen
gas because - Hydrogen gas does not have any optical emission
lines. - The gas is too cold for collisions to bump
electrons up from the ground state (lowest energy
level). - Hydrogen gas is transparent to optical light.
- Emission lines are only found in hot objects.
- Cold objects only produce absorption lines.
26- We should not expect to see an optical emission
line spectrum from a very cold cloud of hydrogen
gas because - Hydrogen gas does not have any optical emission
lines. - The gas is too cold for collisions to bump
electrons up from the ground state (lowest energy
level). - Hydrogen gas is transparent to optical light.
- Emission lines are only found in hot objects.
- Cold objects only produce absorption lines.
27Chemical Fingerprints
- Because those atoms can absorb photons with those
same energies, upward transitions produce a
pattern of absorption lines at the same
wavelengths
28Molecular Lines
Hydrogen spectra on top, molecular H2 On
bottom simpler atomic H
29Molecular Transitions
- In molecules there are many more possible quantum
states, so many more spectral lines - Vibrational and rotational energy levels involve
lower energies (longer wavelengths)
30Peer Instruction QuestionIn what ways is an
electron orbiting the nucleus of an atom like a
planet orbiting the Sun?
- Both are held in orbit by a force
- The smallest orbits are the most tightly held
- If you give an electron or a planet more energy
it will move to a bigger orbit - If you give an electron or a planet enough energy
it can break free - All of the above
31In what ways is an electron orbiting the nucleus
of an atom like a planet orbiting the Sun?
- Both are held in orbit by a force
- The smallest orbits are the most tightly held
- If you give an electron or a planet more energy
it will move to a bigger orbit - If you give an electron or a planet enough energy
it can break free - All of the above
32Peer Instruction QuestionIn what ways is an
electron orbiting the nucleus of an atom
different from a planet orbiting the Sun?
- The central force is electromagnetic ( and
-charges attract), not gravity - Not all orbits are allowedonly certain sizes
(they are quantized) - Because atomic orbits behave differently from
regular orbits we call them orbitals - An electron can jump or make a transition from
one orbital to another - All of the above
33In what ways is an electron orbiting the nucleus
of an atom different from a planet orbiting the
Sun?
- The central force is electromagnetic ( and
-charges attract), not gravity - Not all orbits are allowedonly certain sizes
(they are quantized) - Because atomic orbits behave differently from
regular orbits we call them orbitals - An electron can jump or make a transition from
one orbital to another - All of the above
34Doppler Effect
- An observed wavelength or frequency will differ
from the emitted one if there is a relative
motion between the emitter and the observer. - RECESSION ? the OBSERVED ? IS LONGER,
- or FREQUENCY IS LOWER --- REDSHIFT
- APPROACH ? the OBSERVED ? IS SHORTER,
- or FREQUENCY IS HIGHER --- BLUESHIFT
35Doppler Shift Illustration
Doppler Effect Applet
36Measuring the Shift
Stationary
Moving Away
Away Faster
Moving Toward
Toward Faster
- We generally measure the Doppler Effect from
shifts in the wavelengths of spectral lines
37Doppler shift tells us ONLY about the part of an
objects motion toward or away from us
Star Motion Doppler Applet
38Doppler Shift Formula
- Ex ?em 400.000 nm, ?obs400.005 nm
- What is the velocity of the star?
- ?? 400.005 nm - 400.000 nm 0.005 nm
- So, v c (??/ ?) 3.0x105 km/s (0.005 nm/400nm)
3.0x105 km/s (1.25x10-5) 3.75 km/s - Or the star is moving 3.8 km/s AWAY from us.
- We can much more easily HEAR the Doppler effect
than SEE it.
WHY?
39Sound Speed vs Light Speed
- The speed of sound in air is a little more than
300 m/s (or 1000 ft/s) while the speed of light
in air is 300,000,000 m/s or nearly 1,000,000
times more! - A car traveling 62 mph (or 100 km/h) is moving
roughly 30 m/s (really 27.8 m/s) or a little less
than 10 of the speed of sound. - You can hear a pitch change of 10 very easily.
- But the same car is traveling less than 10-7 of
the speed of light -- that shift of a 500 nm
visible spectral line would be only 0.00005 nm --
- way too small to see and extraordinarily hard to
measure only a few instruments around the world
can do this they are used to find planets around
OTHER stars.
40Can the Doppler shift be measured with invisible
light?
- No
- Yes
41Can the Doppler shift be measured with invisible
light?
- No
- Yes, Thats how you get a speeding ticketpolice
use radar (microwaves) to measure your cars
Doppler shift.
42Thunder and Lightning
- You see lightning the thunderclap comes later.
- Lightning is seen at the speed of light
- Thunder is heard at the speed of sound.
- Since sound travels roughly 300 m/s or 1000 ft/s,
if he sound arrives - about 3 seconds later the bolt was about 1 km
away - 5 sec later, about a mile away
- 0 sec later -- you may be dead from a lightning
strike!
43- If a distant galaxy has a substantial redshift
(as viewed from our galaxy), then anyone living
in that galaxy would see a substantial redshift
in a spectrum of the Milky Way Galaxy. - Yes, and the redshifts would be the same.
- Yes, but we would measure a higher redshift than
they would. - Yes, but we would measure a lower redshift than
they would. - No, they would not measure a redshift toward us.
- No, they would measure a blueshift.
44- If a distant galaxy has a substantial redshift
(as viewed from our galaxy), then anyone living
in that galaxy would see a substantial redshift
in a spectrum of the Milky Way Galaxy. - Yes, and the redshifts would be the same.
- Yes, but we would measure a higher redshift than
they would. - Yes, but we would measure a lower redshift than
they would. - No, they would not measure a redshift toward us.
- No, they would measure a blueshift.
45Spectral Line Shapes
- In reality, lines are not at exactly one
frequency or wavelength - All lines have widths, shown here for an emission
line. - Line shapes are an important tool in studying
stars and gas in space
46Thermal and Rotational Broadening
- Higher pressure gas produces broader lines
- Rotation produces broadening of a different
shape redshifts from receding side and
blueshifts from approaching
47Spectrometers
- Most telescopes spend most of their time
measuring spectra of stars, gas clouds and
galaxies. WHY? - Spectra tell us
- Compositions elements molecules (line
positions) - Temperatures (line strengths)
- Abundances (line strengths)
- Pressures (line widths pressure broadening)
- Radial velocities (Doppler shift)
- Rotation (Doppler broadening)
- Magnetic fields (Zeeman splitting)
- And, indirectly, masses, ages, distances, sizes
and MORE!
48How do we interpret an actual spectrum?
- By carefully studying the features in a spectrum,
we can learn a great deal about the object that
created it.
49What is this object?
Reflected Sunlight Continuous spectrum of
visible light is like the Suns except that some
of the blue light has been absorbed - object must
look red
50What is this object?
Thermal Radiation Infrared spectrum peaks at a
wavelength corresponding to a temperature of 225 K
51What is this object?
Carbon Dioxide Absorption lines are the
fingerprint of CO2 in the atmosphere
52What is this object?
Ultraviolet Emission Lines Indicate a hot upper
atmosphere
53What is this object?
Mars!
54Peer Instruction QuestionSuppose you observed
the spectrum of sunlight reflected from Mars.
Compared to the spectrum of the sun observed
directly, it would
- Have more emission (bright lines)
- Have more absorption (dark lines)
- Have more energy in the red part of the spectrum
- 1 and 3
- 2 and 3
55Suppose you observed the spectrum of sunlight
reflected from Mars. Compared to the spectrum of
the sun observed directly, it would
- Have more emission (bright lines)
- Have more absorption (dark lines)
- Have more energy in the red part of the spectrum
- 1 and 3
- 2 and 3