Light & Telescopes (Chapter 5) All of what we know and understand about the stars is the result of...

Post on 17-Jan-2016

213 views 0 download

Tags:

transcript

Light & Telescopes(Chapter 5)

All of what we know and understand about the stars is the result of observation and analysis of light.

Student Learning Objectives

• Describe the properties of light

• Identify types and properties of telescopes

What are the properties of light?

Electromagnetic waves carry information as well as energy.

Light speed is constant in a vacuum (in space)

• 3 x 108 m/s• 186,000 miles/sec• 670 million mph

The energy we are now observing from objects in space was generated at some time in the past.

Sun 8 min.Proxima Centauri 4.2 LY

Sirius 8.6 LYAndromeda

Galaxy2.5 x 106 LY

Practice:

In a science fiction movie, when a spaceship explodes, we see and hear the explosion instantly. What are the mistakes in this scenario?

Wave PropertiesElectromagnetic waves have a wavelength (l)

and frequency (n).

c = ln

Electromagnetic radiation exhibits wave-particle duality.

Photons No mass Pure energy

Each photon of light carries energy.

The more photons, the higher the intensity.

E = hc l

E = hn

Electromagnetic Radiation

http://www.chromoscope.net/

l n EGamma Rays

X-RaysUltraviolet

VisibleInfrared

Radio

http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/ir-photo-album/en/

We interpret particular wavelengths of visible light as particular colors!

Red Yellow Blue7000 Å 5500 Å 4000 ÅCooler Hotter

Less Energy More Energy

ROY G BV

Some of the Information in The Light

• Energy output• Temperature

• Chemical composition• Distance

• Relative Motion

Atmospheric Windows

Practice

1) What is the speed of a radio wave?

 

2) Which wavelength is longer?

a. 95.1 MHz

b. 1220 MHz

More Practice

3) Which star would be hotter, a blue star or a red star?

 

4) What affects the intensity of the light we receive from stars?

What are the main features of optical telescopes?

Reflection is a bounce (mirrors)

Refraction is a change in velocity (lenses)

Reflecting Telescope

Reflecting telescopes utilize a mirror.

Refracting telescopes utilize a lens.

Refracting Telescope

Newtonian Reflector Mirror

The objective or primary lens/mirror of the telescope is the most important part.

Refractor Issues

All refractors produce chromatic aberration (“color deviation or distortion”).

Interesting Note: A very long focal length will minimize chromatic aberration. This is why the early refracting telescopes (like Galileo’s) were made very long.

Reflector Issues

Reflectors may produce a fuzzy image due to spherical aberration (curvature distortion).

Hubble Images

Advanced optical telescopes use floppy mirror segments controlled by a computer.

Why?

Practice

1) What is the main purpose of a telescope?

2) Where are the telescopes that astronomers use?

3) Are there any telescopes that can be used during the day?

Mauna Kea, Hawaii(Elevation 14,000 Feet)

What are the functions of telescopes?

Light Gathering Power

Ability of the telescope to collect photons.

LGP = (Diameter)2

Resolving Power

Ability of the telescope to “see” fine detail, and distinguish individual objects from each other

a = (2.06 x 105) l Diameter

Larger D and Smaller lsharper images

Image Credit: Richard Bloch

An image of two stars through a

telescope with low angular resolution

An image of two stars through a

telescope with high angular resolution.

Magnifying Power

Telescopes enlarge the image.

Atmosphere & Light affect observations.

Mars with naked eye

Practice

1) Which telescope would allow you to see fainter objects?

 

a. Small diameter telescope

b. Large diameter telescope

c. Either as long as there is good magnification

 

2) What are the advantages of space based telescopes?

What is a radio telescope?

A large parabolic dish gathers radio waves and reflects this energy to a central focus.

Star formation regionsSETI program

Interferometers

A single radio telescope has very poor angular resolution.

An interferometer is a set of radio telescopes connected together.

Constructive light Interference

NRAO

DetectorsPhotometers: count

photons

Measure Intensity

CCD - Charge-Coupled Device: produce electronic images with millions of light detectors (pixels on a small silicon wafer)

Measure Intensity per Pixel

Camera!

Spectrographs: use a grating to split light into individual wavelengths

White Light → Rainbow

Adaptive optics: is a computer program that corrects for bad seeing

Removes blurring caused by atmosphere

Sun's Visible Spectrum

Image Credit: Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope

Image Credit: Gemini Observatory

Practice

1) What do people use everyday that has a CCD camera?

2) Optics are lenses and mirrors. How do adaptive optics differ from regular optics?

3) What are two tools that astronomers can use to produce the clearest image possible?