Week 8 Day 1 Announcements

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Astronomy Notes to Accompany the Text Astronomy Today, Chaisson, McMillan Jim Mims.
Advertisements

Universe Eighth Edition Universe Roger A. Freedman William J. Kaufmann III CHAPTER 5 The Nature of Light CHAPTER 5 The Nature of Light.
Radiation and Spectra Chapter 5
Chapter 4 The Origin and Nature of Light
Light and Atoms Chapter 3.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 2 Light and Matter.
LECTURE 5, SEPTEMBER 7, 2010 ASTR 101, SECTION 3 INSTRUCTOR, JACK BRANDT 1ASTR 101-3, FALL 2010.
Chapter 5 Light and Matter: Reading Messages from the Cosmos
Charles Hakes Fort Lewis College1. Charles Hakes Fort Lewis College2 Chapter 2,9 Stefan’s Law/ Spectroscopy.
Unit 4 Atomic Physics and Spectra. The Electromagnetic Spectrum.
Astro 201: Sept. 14, 2010 Read: Hester, Chapter 4 Chaos and Fractal information on class web page On-Line quiz #3: available after class, due next Tuesday.
Astronomy Picture of the Day. Why Can We See Each Other? Light emitted from other sources is reflected off of us. We don’t radiate in the visible part.
Test #1, Wednesday, Feb 10 I will post a review for Test 1 in the A101 homepage under the link to “Lectures” this week. I will tell you the topics to review.
Week 6 Day 3 Announcements
Astronomy Picture of the Day. Possible First Pic of Extrasolar Planet
A) gamma rays b) infrared c) sound d) visible light e) radio Which of these is NOT a form of electromagnetic radiation? Question 1.
Astronomy Picture of the Day. Why Can We See Each Other? Light emitted from other sources is reflected off of us. We don’t radiate in the visible part.
Question 1 1) proton 2) electron 3) neutron 4) atomic nucleus
Quiz 1 Each quiz sheet has a different 5-digit symmetric number which must be filled in (as shown on the transparency, but NOT the same one!!!!!) Please.
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley Orbital Energy and Escape Velocity orbital energy = kinetic energy + gravitational potential.
Electromagnetic Radiation
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Light and Matter: Reading Messages from the Cosmos.
Chapter 3 Light and Matter
Blackbody Radiation & Atomic Spectra. “Light” – From gamma-rays to radio waves The vast majority of information we have about astronomical objects comes.
Blackbody Radiation And Spectra. Light is a form of _______. Why is this important? With very few exceptions, the only way we have to study objects in.
Stars and Galaxies 28.1 A Closer Look at Light Chapter 28.
Astronomy Chapter 4 Review Game
Energy Energy is a property that enables something to do work
Properties of Light.
Week 7 Day 3 Announcements Grades Participation scores will be up to date after Spring Break Dr. Saul if there are discrepancies (include your iClicker.
Lecture 9 Stellar Spectra
Light and Matter Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 6.
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley 6. Light: The Cosmic Messenger.
How to Make Starlight (part 1) Chapter 7. Origin of light Light (electromagnetic radiation) is just a changing electric and magnetic field. Changing electric.
1 Nature of Light Wave Properties Light is a self- propagating electro- magnetic wave –A time-varying electric field makes a magnetic field –A time-varying.
READING Unit 22, Unit 23, Unit 24, Unit 25. Homework 4 Unit 19, problem 5, problem 7 Unit 20, problem 6, problem 9 Unit 21, problem 9 Unit 22, problem.
Light 1)Exam Review 2)Introduction 3)Light Waves 4)Atoms 5)Light Sources October 14, 2002.
Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about.
© 2007 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Exam #1 Approaching 1 st Exam will be in four days (Friday, Sept. 18) – Chapters closed book/notes exam 40 questions, multiple choice, no calculators.
Electromagnetic Radiation (How we get information about the cosmos) Examples of electromagnetic radiation? Light Infrared Ultraviolet Microwaves AM radio.
Homework 4 Unit 21 Problem 17, 18, 19 Unit 23 Problem 9, 10, 13, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outline Chapter 2 Light and Matter.
Chapter 2: Light and Matter Electromagnetic Radiation
Atoms & Starlight (Chapter 6).
Light and Matter Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 6.
A Brief Review of “Matter”. Atom nucleus electron e-e- (proton,neutrons) p+p+ n ● 10,000,000 atoms can fit across a period in your textbook. ● The nucleus.
Note that the following lectures include animations and PowerPoint effects such as fly-ins and transitions that require you to be in PowerPoint's Slide.
Chapter 5 Light: The Cosmic Messenger. 5.1Basic Properties of Light and Matter Light: electromagnetic waves 1. Velocity (c = speed of light), wavelength.
Spectroscopy and Atoms
Universe Tenth Edition Chapter 5 The Nature of Light Roger Freedman Robert Geller William Kaufmann III.
Astronomy 1010 Planetary Astronomy Fall_2015 Day-18.
Electromagnetic Radiation, Atomic Structure & Spectra.
Starlight What is it? What does it tell us? Write down all notes in RED.
Chapter 24 Video Field Trip: Fireball Write down five facts from the video!
NATS From the Cosmos to Earth Light as a Wave For a wave, its speed: s = l x f But the speed of light is a constant, c. For light: l x f = c The.
Starter 1.Where are most asteroids located? 2.Describe the structure of a comet. 3.Where do short period comets come from? What about long period comets?
Light and The Electromagnetic Spectrum Why do we have to study “light”?... Because almost everything in astronomy is known because of light (or some.
1 Why Learn about Atomic Structure? Knowing the structure of atoms tells us about their –chemical properties –light-emitting properties –light-absorbing.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Solar System Lesson2 Q & A
Atoms and Spectra.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Spectroscopy and Atoms
Electromagnetic Radiation (Light)
Stars and Galaxies Lesson2 Q & A
Light and The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Chapter 3 Review Worksheet
Light and The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Review session: Tonight, 7:00-8:00 pm, Swain East 010
Presentation transcript:

Week 8 Day 1 Announcements Grades First iClicker scores have posted (from 4 classes) Participation scores will be up to date after Spring Break Homework: Homework assignments for Chs 4 & 5 will post tomorrow Cannot do homework without Mastering Astronomy Homework counts for 22% of your grade NOT DOING HOMEWORK REDUCES YOUR CHANCES OF A GOOD GRADE IN THIS CLASS Extensions Since Extensions remove late penalties, you can keep working on your homework assignments while waiting for an extension to be granted Email Make sure you include ASTR 101 in email subject and your name at the end of the message text.

Question 1 a) wavelength b) frequency c) period d) amplitude e) energy The distance between successive wave crests defines the ________ of a wave. Answer: a

Question 1 a) wavelength b) frequency c) period d) amplitude e) energy The distance between successive wave crests defines the ________ of a wave. Light can range from short-wavelength gamma rays to long-wavelength radio waves.

Question 2 a) radius. b) mass. c) magnetic field. d) temperature. e) direction of motion. The frequency at which a star’s intensity is greatest depends directly on its Answer: d

Question 2 a) radius. b) mass. c) magnetic field. d) temperature. e) direction of motion. The frequency at which a star’s intensity is greatest depends directly on its Wien’s Law means that hotter stars produce much more high- frequency light.

Question 3 Rigel appears as a bright bluish star, whereas Betelgeuse appears as a bright reddish star. Rigel is ______ Betelgeuse. a) cooler than b) the same temperature as c) older than d) hotter than e) more massive than Betelgeuse Answer: d The constellation ORION Rigel

Question 3 Rigel appears as a bright bluish star, whereas Betelgeuse appears as a bright reddish star. Rigel is ______ Betelgeuse. a) cooler than b) the same temperature as c) older than d) hotter than e) more massive than Betelgeuse Hotter stars look bluer in color; cooler stars look redder. The constellation ORION Rigel

Question 4 If a light source is approaching you, you will observe a) its spectral lines are redshifted. b) the light is much brighter. c) its spectral lines are shorter in wavelength. d) the amplitude of its waves has increased. e) its photons have increased in speed. If a light source is approaching you, you will observe Answer: c

Question 4 If a light source is approaching you, you will observe a) its spectral lines are redshifted. b) the light is much brighter. c) its spectral lines are shorter in wavelength. d) the amplitude of its waves has increased. e) its photons have increased in speed. If a light source is approaching you, you will observe The Doppler Shift explains that wavelengths from sources approaching us are blueshifted.

Clicker Question: Why is the sky blue? A: Molecules in the atmosphere scatter red light more than blue light. B: Molecules in the atmosphere scatter blue light more than red light. C: Molecules in the atmosphere absorb the red light D: The sky reflects the color of the oceans.

Types of Spectra 1. "Continuous" spectrum - radiation over a broad range of wavelengths (light: bright at every color). 2. "Emission line" spectrum - bright at specific wavelengths only. 3. Continuous spectrum with "absorption lines": bright over a broad range of wavelengths with a few dark lines.

Kirchhoff's Laws 1. A hot, opaque solid, liquid or dense gas produces a continuous spectrum. 2. A transparent hot gas produces an emission line spectrum. 3. A transparent, cool gas absorbs wavelengths from a continuous spectrum, producing an absorption line spectrum.

Sodium emission and absorption spectra The pattern of emission (or absorption) lines is a fingerprint of the element in the gas (such as hydrogen, neon, etc.) For a given element, emission and absorption lines occur at the same wavlengths. Sodium emission and absorption spectra

The Particle Nature of Light On microscopic scales (scale of atoms), light travels as individual packets of energy, called photons. c photon energy is proportional toradiation frequency: E  (or E   ) example: ultraviolet photons are more harmful than visible photons. 1 

The Nature of Atoms The Bohr model of the Hydrogen atom: electron _ _ + + proton "ground state" an "excited state" Ground state is the lowest energy state. Atom must gain energy to move to an excited state. It must absorb a photon or collide with another atom.

But, only certain energies (or orbits) are allowed: _ _ _ a few energy levels of H atom + The atom can only absorb photons with exactly the right energy to boost the electron to one of its higher levels. (photon energy α frequency)

When an atom absorbs a photon, it moves to a higher energy state briefly When it jumps back to lower energy state, it emits a photon - in a random direction

Other elements Helium Carbon neutron proton Atoms have equal positive and negative charge. Each element has its own allowed energy levels and thus its own spectrum.

So why absorption lines? . . . . . cloud of gas . . . . . . The green photons (say) get absorbed by the atoms. They are emitted again in random directions. Photons of other wavelengths go through. Get dark absorption line at green part of spectrum.

Why emission lines? hot cloud of gas . . . . . . - Collisions excite atoms: an electron moves into a higher energy level - Then electron drops back to lower level - Photons at specific frequencies emitted.

Ionization Two atoms colliding can also lead to ionization. Hydrogen _ + Energetic UV Photon _ Helium + + Energetic UV Photon _ Atom "Ion" Two atoms colliding can also lead to ionization.

Clicker Question: Astronomers analyze spectra from astrophysical objects to learn about: A: Composition (what they are made of) B: Temperature C: line-of-sight velocity D: Gas pressures E: All of the above

Clicker Question: Ionized Helium consists of two neutrons and: A: two protons in the nucleus and 1 orbiting electron B: two protons in the nucleus and 2 orbiting electrons C: one proton in the nucleus and 1 orbiting electron D: one proton in the nucleus and 2 orbiting electrons E: two protons in the nucleus and 3 orbiting electrons

Clicker Question: Why is the sky blue? A: Molecules in the atmosphere scatter red light more than blue light. B: Molecules in the atmosphere scatter blue light more than red light. C: Molecules in the atmosphere absorb the red light D: The sky reflects the color of the oceans.

Stellar Spectra Spectra of stars are different mainly due to temperature and composition differences. 'Atmosphere', atoms and ions absorb specific wavelengths of the black-body spectrum Interior, hot and dense, fusion generates radiation with black-body spectrum Star

We've used spectra to find planets around other stars.

Star wobbling due to gravity of planet causes small Doppler shift of its absorption lines. Amount of shift depends on velocity of wobble. Also know period of wobble. This is enough to constrain the mass and orbit of the planet.

As of today ~400 extrasolar planets known As of today ~400 extrasolar planets known. Here are the first few discovered.

Molecules Two or more atoms joined together. They occur in atmospheres of cooler stars, cold clouds of gas, planets. Examples H2 = H + H CO = C + O CO2 = C + O + O NH3 = N + H + H + H (ammonia) CH4 = C + H + H + H + H (methane) They have - electron energy levels (like atoms) - rotational energy levels - vibrational energy levels

Searching for Habitable planets around other stars

Molecule vibration and rotation

The Solar System Chapter 4 Ingredients? The Sun Planets Moons and Rings Comets Asteroids (size > 100 m) Meteoroids (size < 100 m) Kuiper Belt Oort cloud Zodiacal dust A lot of nearly empty space

Solar System Perspective  80,000 light-years <------------------------------>  3.2 light-hours <-----------------------------------------------> Zoom out 220 million times ---> Artist’s view or our Galaxy

Orbits of Planets All orbit in same direction. Most orbit in same plane. Elliptical orbits, but low eccentricity for most, so nearly circular.

Exceptions: Mercury Pluto (no longer a planet) orbital tilt 7o orbital tilt 17.2o eccentricity 0.21 eccentricity 0.25 (Earth: orbit eccentricity 0.016: nearly circular orbit)

Sun, Planets,our Moon and Pluto to scale (mostly) Mistakes: Jupiter should have rings Pluto should be smaller than Moon