Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byPatrick Norman Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chapter 5 Light: The Cosmic Messenger
2
5.2 Learning from Light Our goals for learning What types of light spectra can we observe? How does light tell us what things are made of? How does light tell the temperatures of planets and stars? How does light tell us the speed of a distant object?
3
What types of light spectra can we observe?
5
Example: Solar Spectrum
6
How does light tell us what things are made of? Electrons in atoms have distinct energy levels. Each chemical element, ion, molecule, has a unique set of energy levels.
7
Distinct energy levels lead to distinct emission or absorption lines. Hydrogen Energy Levels
8
Chemical Fingerprints Every atom, ion, and molecule has a unique spectral “fingerprint” We can identify the chemicals in gas by their fingerprints in the spectrum. With additional physics, we can figure out abundances of the chemicals, and much more.
10
Thought Question Which letter(s) labels absorption lines? ABCDE
11
Which letter(s) labels absorption lines? ABCDE
12
Thought Question Which letter(s) labels the peak (greatest intensity) of infrared light? ABCDE
13
Which letter(s) labels the peak (greatest intensity) of infrared light? ABCDE
14
Thought Question Which letter(s) labels emission lines? ABCDE
15
Which letter(s) labels emission lines? ABCDE
16
How does light tell us the temperatures of planets and stars? Thermal Radiation Nearly all large or dense objects emit thermal radiation, including stars, planets, you… An object’s thermal radiation spectrum depends on only one property: its temperature
17
Two Properties of Thermal Radiation: 1.Hotter objects emit more light at all frequencies per unit area. 2.Hotter objects emit photons with a higher average energy.
18
Spectra
19
Thought Question Which is hotter? a)A blue star. b)A red star. c)A planet that emits only infrared light.
20
Which is hotter? a)A blue star. b)A red star. c)A planet that emits only infrared light.
21
Thought Question Why don’t we glow in the dark? a)People do not emit any kind of light. b)People only emit light that is invisible to our eyes. c)People are too small to emit enough light for us to see. d)People do not contain enough radioactive material.
22
Why don’t we glow in the dark? a)People do not emit any kind of light. b)People only emit light that is invisible to our eyes. c)People are too small to emit enough light for us to see. d)People do not contain enough radioactive material.
23
How does light tell us the speed of a distant object? The Doppler Effect.
24
The amount of blue or red shift tells us an object’s speed toward or away from us:
25
Doppler shift tells us ONLY about the part of an object’s motion toward or away from us:
26
The Doppler Effect
27
Same for Light
28
Thought Question I measure a line in the lab at 500.7 nm. The same line in a star has wavelength 502.8 nm. What can I say about this star? a)It is moving away from me. b)It is moving towards me. c)It has unusually long spectral lines.
29
I measure a line in the lab at 500.7 nm. The same line in a star has wavelength 502.8 nm. What can I say about this star? a)It is moving away from me. b)It is moving towards me. c)It has unusually long spectral lines.
30
Measuring Redshift
32
Measuring Velocity
34
Doppler Effect Summary Motion toward or away from an observer causes a shift in the observed wavelength of light: blueshift (shorter wavelength) motion toward you redshift (longer wavelength) motion toward you greater shift greater speed
35
What have we learned? What types of light spectra can we observe? Thermal radiation spectrum – looks like rainbow of light Absorption line spectrum – specific colors are missing from the rainbow Emission line spectrum– see light only of a specific color
36
What have we learned? How does light tell us what things are made of? Every kind of atom, ion, and molecule produces a unique set of spectral lines. How does light tell use the temperatures of planets and stars? We can determine temperature from the spectrum of thermal radiation
37
What have we learned? How does light tell us the speed of a distant object? The Doppler effect tells us how fast an object is moving toward or away from us. –Blueshift:objects moving toward us –Redshift: objects moving away from us
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.