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Published byBernard Fitzgerald Modified over 9 years ago
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Spectroscope focused on a Bunsen flame
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The sodium flame test
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The Sun
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Atoms in the cooler gas mantle around the Sun absorb the background hotter radiation we see at specific wavelengths
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Fraunhofer’s original drawn lines overlayed on the visible spectrum - NB with red to the left (modern convention is blue to the left)
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DCBEFG 400 500600700 nm A Fraunhofer mapped out the puzzling dark lines in the solar spectrum labelling them A B C D… from the red end
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3P 3/2 3P 1/2 2S 1/2 589.0 nm589.6 nm 0.597 nm Sodium D Lines
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Na D lines Orange street lamps contain sodium Fraunhofer Absorption Lines in the Sun’s Spectrum
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3P 3/2 3P 1/2 2S 1/2 589.0 nm589.6 nm 0.597 nm Sodium D Lines
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Fraunhofer – the Father of Astrophysics
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Thomson Higher Education
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Commemorated by the German Stamp
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DCBEFG 400 500600700 nm
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Noting that the solar spectrum was crossed by "innumerable" dark lines, Fraunhofer mapped their relative positions with precision. He developed an alphabetic system for labeling selected reference lines, assigning A to a line near the red end of the spectrum, D to the pair of dark lines associated with the bright orange streak he had observed in flame spectra, H to a line near the end of the visible violet, and I to a line in the ultraviolet. Fraunhofer's lines puzzled practitioners and theorists alike for over four decades after the publication of his spectral maps.
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Na D lines Orange street lamps contain sodium Fraunhofer Absorption Lines in the Sun’s Spectrum Harry Kroto 2004
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