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Lecture 6: The Physics of Light, Part 1 Astronomy 111 Wednesday September 14, 2016 Reminders • Star party Thursday night! • Homework #3 due Monday • Exam #1 Wednesday, September 21 ASTR111 Lecture 6 The nature of light ―Look, but don’t touch.‖ - Astronomers’ Motto ASTR111 Lecture 6 Visible light is just one form of electromagnetic radiation The universe contains electrically charged particles: electrons (-) and protons (+). Charged particles are surrounded by electric fields and magnetic fields. Fluctuations in these fields produce electromagnetic radiation. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Visible light is just one form of electromagnetic radiation - but so are radio waves, microwaves, infrared light, ultraviolet light, X-rays, and gamma rays. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Speed of light Speed of wave, c, equals wavelength times frequency (units = meter/sec): c=lxn The speed of light in a vacuum is always c = 300,000 km/s (186,000 miles/sec). ASTR111 Lecture 6 Speed of light Ole Romer (Danish, 1644-1710) was the first person to measure the speed of light Measured timing of eclipses of Jupiter’s moon Io at different times of the year—observed that light took longer when Earth was near Jupiter’s orbit! ASTR111 Lecture 6 Light year • A light-year is the distance light travels in one year • 1 light-year = 9.5 x 1012 km • A unit of distance—not a unit of time! • For reference, – The Moon is 1.25 light-seconds from Earth – Earth is 8.3 light-minutes from the Sun – The Sun is 4.3 light-years from the nearest star ASTR111 Lecture 6 Light can be thought of as a wave Wave = a periodic fluctuation travelling through a medium. Ocean wave = fluctuation in the height of water. Sound wave = fluctuation in air pressure. Electromagnetic wave = fluctuation in electric and magnetic fields. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Wave characteristics (1) Wavelength, l (lambda): distance between wave crests (units = meter). (2) Frequency, n (nu): number of crests passing per second (units = 1/sec = Hertz). (3) Amplitude, a: height of wave crests. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Wave characteristics ASTR111 Lecture 6 Particle nature of light • Particles of light are called ―photons‖ • Each photon has a wavelength and a frequency • A photon’s energy depends on its frequency (wavelength) ASTR111 Lecture 6 Photons The energy of a photon is related to the frequency of a wave: E = hf E = energy of photon f = frequency of light (also called n) h = Planck’s constant (A Small Number) ASTR111 Lecture 6 Photons Don’t forget units! Wavelength -> length Frequency -> 1/time (per second) Energy -> joules ASTR111 Lecture 6 Light forms a spectrum from short to long wavelengths Visible light has wavelengths from 400 to 700 nanometers. [1 nanometer (nm) = 10-9 meter] Color is determined by wavelength: Blue: 480 nm Green: 530 nm Red: 660 nm ASTR111 Lecture 6 ASTR111 Lecture 6 The complete spectrum of light Gamma rays (l < 0.01 nanometers) X-rays (0.01 – 10 nm) Ultraviolet (10 – 400 nm) Visible (400 – 700 nm) Infrared (700 nm – 1 mm) Microwaves (1 – 100 mm) Radio (> 100 mm) Energy Visible light occupies only a tiny sliver of the full spectrum. ASTR111 Lecture 6 ASTR111 Lecture 6 Earth’s atmosphere is transparent to visible light and some microwaves and radio waves. ASTR111 Lecture 6 To observe efficiently at other wavelengths, we must go above atmosphere. ASTR111 Lecture 6 NASA's SOFIA Observatory flies a 2.7 m telescope to altitudes as high as 45,000 feet. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Sky: Optical ASTR111 Lecture 6 Sky: Infrared ASTR111 Lecture 6 Sky: Microwaves ASTR111 Lecture 6 Sky: Radio ASTR111 Lecture 6 Sky: X-ray ASTR111 Lecture 6 How light and matter interact ASTR111 Lecture 6 Atoms Ordinary matter is found primarily in the form of atoms. Range of ordinary matter: – free subatomic particles (protons & electrons) – single atoms (hydrogen, helium, gold, etc.) – simple molecules (O2, H2O) – macromolecules (DNA, complex polymers) ASTR111 Lecture 6 Atomic structure Nucleus of heavy subatomic particles: – proton: positively charged – neutron: uncharged (neutral) Cloud of Electrons orbiting the Nucleus: – electron: negatively charged. – mass 1/1860th of proton Mostly empty space 1 part in 1015 of the volume is occupied. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Simple atoms 1H 4He proton electron neutron ASTR111 Lecture 6 Chemical elements Distinguish atoms into Elements by the total number of protons in the nucleus. 1 proton = Hydrogen 2 protons = Helium 3 protons = Lithium ... and so on Number of electrons = Number of protons (at least in conditions here on earth) Elements are Chemically Distinct ASTR111 Lecture 6 Isotopes Distinguish elements into Isotopes by the number of neutrons in the nucleus. Example: 12C has 6 protons and 6 neutrons 13C has 6 protons and 7 neutrons 14C has 6 protons and 8 neutrons same # of protons & electrons, but different # of neutrons ASTR111 Lecture 6 Hydrogen 1 proton 1H 2H 3He 4He Helium 2 protons Lithium 3 protons 6Li Proton: 7Li Neutron: ASTR111 Lecture 6 3H Radioactivity If too many or too few neutrons in a nucleus, it is unstable against radioactive decay. Examples: (1p+2n) 3He (2p+1n) + e- + ne 14C (6p+8n) 14N (7p+7n) + e- + n e 3H (basis of radioactive carbon dating) Free neutrons are unstable: n p + e- + ne ASTR111 Lecture 6 Energy stored in atoms and molecules emit or absorb light Consider a single, isolated atom: A nucleus, containing protons and neutrons, is surrounded by a cloud of orbiting electrons. Electrons can emit or absorb photons. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Consider hydrogen (the simplest atom): one proton, one electron Behavior on subatomic scales is governed by quantum mechanics. One rule of quantum mechanics: electrons can only exist in orbits of particular energy (energy is quantized). ASTR111 Lecture 6 Emission & absorption ASTR111 Lecture 6 Excitation Start out in the Ground State: All electrons are in their lowest energy orbits. To excite an electron into a higher energy orbit, you need to absorb exactly the energy difference between orbits: – absorb a photon of exactly that energy – collide with an atom or electron and get the energy from the motion of the collider. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Absorb a photon photon Collide with an electron ASTR111 Lecture 6 Absorption ASTR111 Lecture 6 De-excitation Excited states are unstable, and electrons will decay back into their ground states. To de-excite, an electron must rid itself of exactly the amount of excess energy: – emit a photon of the exact energy. – give up the energy to a colliding atom or electron (no photons are emitted). ASTR111 Lecture 6 Emit a photon photon Collide with an electron ASTR111 Lecture 6 Emission ASTR111 Lecture 6 Line spectra • Electrons can only orbit in discrete Energy Levels. • Atoms & molecules can only emit or absorb photons at particular wavelengths. – a unique ―line spectrum‖ for each type of atom or molecule. – what lines you see depends on the state of excitation and ionization of the system. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Emission & absorption lines • Emission lines Photons emitted at particular wavelengths when an electron jumps from a higher to a lower energy orbit. • Absorption lines Photons absorbed at particular wavelengths if their energy is exactly enough to make an electron jump up to a higher energy orbit. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Emission & absorption lines ASTR111 Lecture 6 Ionization If an atom or molecule absorbs enough energy from a photon or a collision, an electron can be ejected. Ion: positively charged atom or molecule. – Changes the spectral line signature – Changes the chemical properties Distinguish ions by the number of electrons removed. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Absorb a photon ion ion photon Collide with an electron ASTR111 Lecture 6 Fundamental forces of nature All interactions in nature are governed by 4 ―fundamental‖ forces: • Gravitational Force • Electromagnetic Force • Strong Nuclear Force • Weak Nuclear Force ASTR111 Lecture 6 Gravitational force Gravitation binds masses over long distances • Long-range attractive force • Weakest force of nature • Obeys the Inverse Square Law of distance: m1m2 F = G 2 d ASTR111 Lecture 6 Electromagnetic force Acts between charged particles: • like charges repel each other • opposite charges attract each other Long-range, inverse-square law force. Binds: • electrons to protons in atoms • atoms to atoms in molecules Very strong: 1040 times stronger than Gravity. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Strong & weak nuclear forces Short-range forces (<10-15 m) in atomic nuclei Strong Force: – binds protons & neutrons into nuclei. – strongest force of nature. Weak Force: – responsible for radioactivity (turns neutron into a proton) – second weakest force. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Interplay of forces Gravity rules on the largest scales. Electromagnetism rules on intermediate scales (atomic scales up to people) Strong & Weak Forces rule on nuclear scales. We will explore the different roles of each in our study of stars, galaxies & the Universe. ASTR111 Lecture 6 Questions: 1) Why are our eyes sensitive to ―visible‖ light? 2) Could we have radio eyes? 3) Why is a leaf green? ASTR111 Lecture 6