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Light and Matter Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 6
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Using Light Our only means of learning about stars is to analyze the light they emit We want to know something about the properties of the material that makes up the star Temperature Composition Motions many more …
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How Do Light and Matter Interact? Light can be absorbed, emitted and reflected by atoms and electrons The properties of the photons change as this happens How? We need to know something about atoms
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The Nature of Matter and its Antecedents Matter is made up of protons, neutrons and electrons Protons and neutrons form the nucleus The number of protons determine the type of element (the atomic number) Electrons are in orbits (or shells or levels or states) surrounding the nucleus In a neutral atom the number of protons and electrons are equal
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Atoms Atoms interact with each other (and light) through the electron shells It takes large amounts of energy to break up the nucleus, so nuclei do not change much The most common atoms are: Hydrogen (one proton, one electron) Helium (2 protons, 2 neutrons, 2 electrons) An atom can become ionized by losing one or more electrons
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Electron States Electrons orbit the nucleus Each orbit has a very specific energy For any particular atom there are only a few permitted energies or orbits e.g. An electron in a hydrogen atom cannot be anywhere, only in the permitted state
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Energy Levels
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Electron Transitions Moving an electron from one state to another involves energy If the atom is hit with a photon it may absorb it and use the energy to move the electron up a level, however: An atom will only absorb a photon if it is at the exact energy for a level transition Thus, any one type of atom is able to absorb photons at a only a few specific energies
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Absorption and Emission
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After an atom’s electrons have been excited they may drop down in energy emitting a photon Again, any atom will only emit at certain specific energies If we examine a spectrum of emitting or absorbing atoms, we see absorption and emission lines Absorption lines are dark Emission lines are bright
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Absorption Lines
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Identifying Atoms If you excite some atoms, electrons will move up in energy Atoms can be excited by radiation or collision After excitation the electrons will drop back to their original energy levels and produce photons that we observe as an emission spectrum Each atom has its own distinct emission spectrum and can be thus identified
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Elemental Emission Spectra
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Types of Spectra For a dense gas (or a solid or liquid) the atoms collide so much that they blur the lines into a continuous blackbody spectrum Light at all wavelengths A low density gas excited by collisions or radiation will produce an emission spectrum Light only at specific wavelengths A low density gas in front of a source of continuous radiation will produce an absorption spectrum A continuum with dark lines at specific wavelengths
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Absorption + Continuum
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Pure Emission Spectrum
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Kirchhoff’s Laws If we look at a hot dense object (like a star) we see a continuous spectrum If we look at a hot dense object with cooler low density gas in front of it (like the thin atmosphere above a star) we see a continuum with absorption lines If we look at hot low density gas directly, with no star behind it (such as an emission nebula) we see just emission lines
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Kirchhoff’s Laws
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The Doppler Effect When you observe a moving object, the wavelengths of light you observe change Moving away -- wavelength increases -- red shift Moving towards -- wavelength decreases -- blue shift Example: the change in a car’s sound as it moves past you The faster the motion the larger the change By measuring the shift of lines in a spectrum, you can determine how fast the object is moving
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Doppler Effect
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Spectral Line Shifts For objects moving away from us the spectral lines move to larger wavelengths This is called a red shift For objects moving towards us the spectral lines move to shorter wavelengths This is a blue shift
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Stellar Doppler Shift
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Line Broadening The spectral lines emitted by atoms are not at one precise wavelength, they are broadened in different ways Doppler broadening results from the atoms being in motion so some photons are a little red shifted and some a little blue The hotter the gas the more broadening Collisional broadening results from atom- atom collisions in the gas A larger temperature and larger density produces more broadening
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Doppler Broadening
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How Do We Use Light to Find Stellar Properties? Temperature: From the color of the star From the Doppler broadening Composition: From the spectral lines Motions: From the Doppler shift of spectral lines Density: From the collisional broadening
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Next Time Read Chapter 4.4, Chapter 17.3-17.4 Change from syllabus
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