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Published bySammy Compton Modified over 9 years ago
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Properties of Light
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The Speed of Light Galileo’s Experiment A B c = Round Trip Distance/Total Time
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Ole Roemer (1675) Earth Jupiter
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Speed of Light From Roemer’s Experiment c = Diameter of Orbit/Time Delay Modern Value c = 299,792.458 km/sec
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Speed of Light Absolute constant Nothing travels faster
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Relative Velocities Our physical sense of velocities is relative How we measure speed depends on how we are moving and how the object we are measuring in moving V rel = 0 v v vv V rel = 2v
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Try it with Light Sun ½ c c Intuition says you get ½ c Einstein says c
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Try it with Light Sun ½ c c Intuition says you get 1½ c Einstein says c
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Nature of Light Particle? Newton Wave? Christian Huygens in Newton’s day Thomas Young (1801) Light can diffract - must be a wave Transverse wave
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Types of Waves Transverse and Longitudinal Transverse and Longitudinal
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Wavelength
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Electromagnetic Spectrum Increasing Wavelength Visible Light
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The Visible Spectrum 400nm 500nm 600nm 700nm Wavelength means COLOR
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Frequency Number of complete events occurring in a period of time Waves/second Examples Second hand on a clock? 1 cycle/minute = 1/60 cycle/sec US Presidential Electons 1 election/4 years = 1/4 election/year
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Frequency and Period Period = 1 Frequency
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Speed, Wavelength, Frequency c = f
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Photon Energy E f E = hf
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Properties of Light Speed (c) Nothing travels faster Absolute constant Wavelength ( ) Gamma rays, X-rays, UV, Visible, IR, Radio In visible wavelength means color Frequency (f) Number of complete waves per second Energy of a Photon (E) E = hf
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Dispersive Element Basic Spectrograph Collimating Lens Recording Device Slit Imaging Lens
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Mercury near Horizon The atmosphere can act like a prism
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Continuous Spectrum Source must be HOT and DENSE
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Emisson (Bright Line) Spectrum Source must be HOT and TENUOUS
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Absorption Spectrum
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Types of Spectra Continuous Emission Absorption
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Rutherford Scattering Experiments Atom He “bullet”
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Hydrogen Atoms Simplest atom One proton, one electron Most abundant atom 90% of universe is hydrogen
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Planetary Model Force p e-e- Since electron orbits the proton, a force exists.
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Planetary Model p e-e- Acceleration Force implies acceleration Accelerating charges emit light Light carries energy (E = hf)
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Planetary Model p e-e- Electron moves closer to the nucleus since it requires less energy to be there.
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Planetary Model But the electron is still accelerating Must still be radiating energy (light) Must move still closer to the nucleus Electron will spiral into and collide with the nucleus (in about 10 -8 seconds) Atoms do not exist!!
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Bohr’s Hypotheses Stable electron orbits exist where the electron does not lose energy.
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Electrons can be here or here but not here p
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Bohr’s Hypotheses Transitions can occur between orbits so long as the electron ends up with the energy of the new level.
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Hydrogen EnergyEnergy 2 3 4 5 6563 Å photon Absorption
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Hydrogen EnergyEnergy 2 3 4 5 6563 Å photon Emission
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+P 2 3 4 656 nm 700 nm 400 nm -e Hydrogen Atom 1 -e -e 5 -e 486 nm 434 nm -e 410 nm
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Emission and Absorption Lines Lines come from electron transitions Energy change either comes from (absorption) or is given to (emission) photon. E Photon energy Frequency E = hf Frequency 1/(Wavelength) f = c/ Wavelength means COLOR
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Hydrogen Spectrum EnergyEnergy 1 2 3 4 Lyman (UV) Balmer (VIS) Paschen (IR) Brackett (Far IR)
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Aluminum Oxygen Argon Calcium Carbon Helium Hydrogen Iron Krypton Magnesium Neon Nitrogen Sulfur Sodium Xenon
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Emission & Absorption Spectra for any Element http://jersey.uoregon.edu/vlab/eleme nts/Elements.html
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Review
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End of Light
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