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Date post: 07-Jan-2016
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R. S. Angles. Angle  is the ratio of two lengths: R: physical distance between observer and objects [km] S: physical distance along the arc between 2 objects Lengths are measured in same “units” (e.g., kilometers) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Angles • Angle is the ratio of two lengths: R: physical distance between observer and objects [km] S: physical distance along the arc between 2 objects Lengths are measured in same “units” (e.g., kilometers) is “dimensionless” (no units), and measured in “radians” or “degrees” R S R
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Page 1: Angles

Angles• Angle is the ratio of two lengths:

– R: physical distance between observer and objects [km]

– S: physical distance along the arc between 2 objects

– Lengths are measured in same “units” (e.g., kilometers) is “dimensionless” (no units), and measured in “radians” or

“degrees”

R

SR

Page 2: Angles

“Angular Size” and “Resolution”• Astronomers usually measure sizes in terms of

angles instead of lengths– because the distances are seldom well known

SR

Page 3: Angles

Trigonometry

R

SR

Y

2 2R Y

S = physical length of the arc, measured in mY = physical length of the vertical side [m]

Page 4: Angles

Definitions

2 2 2

2

opposite sidetan

adjacent side

opposite side 1sin

hypotenuse1

S

RY

R

Y

R Y RY

R

S

R

Y

2 2R Y

Page 5: Angles

Angles: units of measure• 2 ( 6.28) radians in a circle

– 1 radian = 360º 2 57º 206,265 seconds of arc per radian

• Angular degree (º) is too large to be a useful angular measure of astronomical objects– 1º = 60 arc minutes– 1 arc minute = 60 arc seconds [arcsec]– 1º = 3600 arcsec– 1 arcsec (206,265)-1 5 10-6 radians = 5 radians

Page 6: Angles

Number of Degrees per Radian

2 radians per circle

3601 radian = 57.296

2

57 17 '45"

Page 7: Angles

Trigonometry in Astronomy

SR

Usually R >> S, so Y S

Y

2 2 2

2

1

1

S Y Y

R R R Y RY

tan sin

Page 8: Angles

-1

-0.5

0

0.5

1

-0.5 -0.25 0 0.25 0.5

sin(x)tan(x)x

x

Three curves nearly match for x 0.1 x| < 0.1radians

sin[] tan[] for 0

Page 9: Angles

Relationship of Trigonometric Functions for Small Angles

Check it!

18° = 18° (2 radians per circle) (360° per circle)

= 0.1radians 0.314 radians

Calculated Results

tan(18°) 0.32

sin (18°) 0.31

0.314 0.32 0.31

tan[] sin[] for | |<0.1

Page 10: Angles

Astronomical Angular “Yardsticks”

• Easy yardstick: your hand held at arms’ length– fist subtends angle of 5°

– spread between extended index finger and thumb 15°

• Easy yardstick: the Moon– diameter of disk of Moon AND of Sun 0.5° = ½°

½° ½ · 1/60 radian 1/100 radian 30 arcmin = 1800 arcsec

Page 11: Angles

“Resolution” of Imaging System

• Real systems cannot “resolve” objects that are closer together than some limiting angle– “Resolution” = “Ability to Resolve”

• Reason: “Heisenberg Uncertainty Relation”– Fundamental limitation due to physics

Page 12: Angles

Image of Point Source1. Source emits “spherical waves” 2. Lens “collects” only part of the sphere

and “flips” its curvature

3. “piece” of sphere converges toform image

D

Page 13: Angles

With Smaller Lens

Lens “collects” a smaller part of sphere.Can’t locate the equivalent position (the “image”) as wellCreates a “fuzzier” image

Page 14: Angles

Image of Two Point Sources

Fuzzy Images “Overlap”and are difficult to distinguish

(this is called “DIFFRACTION”)

Page 15: Angles

Image of Two Point Sources

Apparent angular separation of the stars is

Page 16: Angles

Resolution and Lens Diameter

• Larger lens:– collects more of the spherical wave

– better able to “localize” the point source

– makes “smaller” images

– smaller between distinguished sources means BETTER resolution

D

= wavelength of lightD = diameter of lens

Page 17: Angles

Equation for Angular Resolution

• Better resolution with:– larger lenses– shorter wavelengths

• Need HUGE “lenses” at radio wavelengths to get the same resolution

D

= wavelength of lightD = diameter of lens

Page 18: Angles

Resolution of Unaided Eye

• Can distinguish shapes and shading of light of objects with angular sizes of a few arcminutes

• Rule of Thumb: angular resolution of unaided eye is 1 arcminute

Page 19: Angles

Telescopes and magnification• Telescopes magnify distant scenes

• Magnification = increase in angular size– (makes appear larger)

Page 20: Angles

Simple Telescopes

• Simple refractor telescope (as used by Galileo, Kepler, and their contemporaries) has two lenses– objective lens

• collects light and forms intermediate image• “positive power”• Diameter D determines the resolution

– eyepiece• acts as “magnifying glass”• forms magnified image that appears to be infinitely far away

Page 21: Angles

Galilean Telescope

Ray incident “above” the optical axis emerges “above” the axis

image is “upright”

fobjective

Page 22: Angles

Galilean Telescope

Ray entering at angle emerges at angle >

Larger ray angle angular magnification

Page 23: Angles

Keplerian Telescope

Ray incident “above” the optical axis emerges “below” the axis

image is “inverted”

fobjective feyelens

Page 24: Angles

Keplerian Telescope

Ray entering at angle emerges at angle where | | >

Larger ray angle angular magnification

Page 25: Angles

Telescopes and magnification

• Ray trace for refractor telescope demonstrates how the increase in magnification is achieved– Seeing the Light, pp. 169-170, p. 422

• From similar triangles in ray trace, can show that

– fobjective = focal length of objective lens– feyelens = focal length of eyelens

• magnification is negative image is inverted

objective

eyelens

fmagnification

f

Page 26: Angles

Magnification: Requirements

• To increase apparent angular size of Moon from “actual” to angular size of “fist” requires magnification of:

• Typical Binocular Magnification– with binoculars, can easily see shapes/shading on

Moon’s surface (angular sizes of 10's of arcseconds)• To see further detail you can use small telescope w/

magnification of 100-300– can distinguish large craters w/ small telescope – angular sizes of a few arcseconds

510

0.5

Page 27: Angles

Ways to Specify Astronomical Distances

• Astronomical Unit (AU)– distance from Earth to Sun– 1 AU 93,000,000 miles 1.5 × 108 km

• light year = distance light travels in 1 year1 light year = 60 sec/min 60 min/hr 24 hrs/day 365.25 days/year (3 105) km/sec

9.5 1012 km 5.9 1012 miles 6 trillion miles

Page 28: Angles

Aside: parallax and distance• Only direct measure of distance astronomers have for

objects beyond solar system is parallax– Parallax: apparent motion of nearby stars against background of

very distant stars as Earth orbits the Sun

– Requires images of the same star at two different times of year separated by 6 months

Earth’s Orbit

Foreground star

“Background” star

Caution: NOT to scaleA

B (6 months later)

Apparent Position of ForegroundStar as seen from Location “B”

Apparent Position of ForegroundStar as seen from Location “A”

Page 29: Angles

Parallax as Measure of Distance

• P is the “parallax”• typically measured in arcseconds• Gives measure of distance from Earth to nearby star (distant stars assumed to be an

“infinite” distance away)

Image from “A” Image from “B” 6 months later

Background star P

Page 30: Angles

Definition of Astronomical Parallax

• “half-angle” of triangle to foreground star is 1"– Recall that 1 radian = 206,265"

– 1" = (206,265)-1 radians 5×10-6 radians = 5 radians

• R = 206,265 AU 2×105 AU 3×1013 km – 1 parsec 3×1013 km 20 trillion miles 3.26 light years

Foreground star

1"1 AU

R

Page 31: Angles

Parallax as Measure of Distance

• R = P-1

– R is the distance (measured in pc) and P is parallax (in arcsec)

– Star with parallax (half angle!) of ½" is at distance of 2 pc 6.5 light years

– Star with parallax of 0.1" is at distance of 10 pc 32 light years

• SMALLER PARALLAX MEANS FURTHER AWAY

Page 32: Angles

Limitations to Magnification

• Can you use a telescope to increase angular size of nearest star to match that of the Sun?– nearest star is Cen (alpha Centauri)

– Diameter is similar to Sun’s

– Distance is 1.3 pc• 1.3 pc 4.3 light years 1.51013 km from Earth

– Sun is 1.5 108 km from Earth would require angular magnification of 100,000 = 105

fobjective=105 feyelens

Page 33: Angles

• BUT: you can’t magnify images by arbitrarily large factors!

• Remember diffraction!– Diffraction is the unavoidable propensity of light to change direction

of propagation, i.e., to “bend”

– Cannot focus light from a point source to an arbitrarily small “spot”

• Increasing magnification involves “spreading light out” over a larger imaging (detector) surface

• Diffraction Limit of a telescope

Limitations to Magnification

D

Page 34: Angles

Magnification: limitations• BUT: atmospheric effects typically dominate diffraction

effects– most telescopes are limited by “seeing”: image “smearing” due to

atmospheric turbulence

• Rule of Thumb:– limiting resolution for visible light through atmosphere is

equivalent to that obtained by a telescope with D˚˚3.5" ( 90 mm)


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