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Physics of Astronomy- spring Dr. E.J. Zita, The Evergreen State College, 29.Mar.2004 Lab II Rm 2272, [email protected], 360-867-6853 http://academic.evergreen.edu/curricular/ PhyAstro/home.htm Outline • • • • Logistics and time budget Special events & info Review of last quarter’s content Preview of spring quarter • • • • Introduction to Modern Astrophysics Ch.9 Spring weeks 1-2 Minilecture signup Astronomy signup Logistics and time budget Seminar: Read, preseminar, and write (or rewrite) one paper per week. Research: Spend 12-16 hours per week carrying out your plan, reading, and doing calculations. Texts, classes, and homework: Please present in Astronomy & Cosmologies (AC) every other week Each team minilecture once per week in Physics of Astronomy (PA) (homework-focussed) NEW: P&Q (Points and questions) at least once a week in PA Total ~ 48-60 hours/week, so be sure to schedule in R&R, to stay healthy Special events & info Spring Science Fair at Evergreen – you will definitely present a poster of your research there: May 28-29 (week 9) APS-NW = American Physical Society – Northwest Section meeting Moscow, Idaho / Pullman, WA 21-22 May (Fri.Sat end of week 8) Do you want to go? Present a poster of your research Deadline for registration and Abstracts: 23 April (week 4) Calculus tutorials with Matt (details TBA) TAs = Emily Himmelright and Jenni Walsh Office hours: Wednesday 5-6 in fishbowl Review of winter quarter content Intro to Modern Astrophysics Carroll and Ostlie = CO • • • • • Basic astronomy Gravity + orbits Light + spectra Modern physics, QM Electromagnetism • Sun and Stars • Thermal + radiation • Cosmology Physics and Astronomy Physics: What fundamental, quantitative principles explain the structure and evolution of the natural world? Astronomy: What do we see in the sky, and how do things move and change? Astrophysics: How can Physics explain what Astronomy observes? Four realms of physics Classical Mechanics Quantum Mechanics (big and slow: everyday experience) (small: particles, waves) Special relativity Quantum field theory (fast: light, fast particles) (small and fast: quarks) Ch.1: The Celestial Sphere (Figures from Freedman and Kaufmann, Universe) 1.1: The Greek Tradition; Team 1: Celestial Sphere 1.2 The Copernican Revolution; Team 2: Periods; prob.1.3 1.3 Positions on the Cel.Sph. Team 3.a: Altitude+ Azimuth (p.10-13), prob. 1.5 Team 3.b: Right Ascension and Declination (p.13-15), prob.1.4 Team 3.c: Precession and motion of the stars (p.15-19), prob.1.6 1.4 Physics and Astronomy Ch.1: Key concepts arclength D = d a when a is in radians Alt-Az above, RA-Dec below 1 1 1 S P P Ch.2: Celestial Mechanics 2.1 Elliptical Orbits 2.2 Newtonian Mechanics: F GmM rˆ 2 r and conservation of angular momentum 2.3 Kepler’s Laws: we derived K3 from N2: 4p2r3 = GMT2 We derived the Schwarzschild radius for a black hole; we weighed Jupiter and the Sun using orbital satellites, and we discovered dark matter in Galaxies from non-Keplerian velocity curves 2.4 The Virial Theorem: E = U/2 in a central field. Keplerian orbits: closer = faster Spherical coordinates Ch.3: The continuous spectrum of Light 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Parallax distance brightness Magnitude Wave nature of light Radiation Quantization of Energy 3.6 Color (wavelength) temperature, power output, absolute brightness… Spectra tell us all this about stars: • Color temperature: l(m) = 3x10-3/T(K) • Temperature Power output per unit area: flux = intensity of radiation = F=sT4 • Power output = Luminosity = L • Intensity = power / area: F= L/4pR2 • Greater radiation flux brighter star: F ~ b • Brightness is perceived on a logarithmic scale. Apparent magnitude difference m2-m1=Dm= 1 brightness ratio b1/b2 = 100 1/5 = 2.512 • Absolute magnitude M is what a star would have if it stood at a distance of d=10 pc from Earth. Ch.5: Interaction of Light & Matter 5.1 Spectral lines 5.2 Photons 5.3 Bohr model 5.4 QM and wave-particle duality Spectral lines tell us more about stars: •Spectral lines composition & atmosphere, stellar type and age, •Shifts in spectral lines proper motion, rotation, magnetic fields (Zeeman), • oscillations internal structure, internal rotation, planets… Emission and absorption lines text Planck quantizes light energy: photons • E = hc/l = hn pc • Interference + diffraction: light = wave • Photoelectric effect: Light particles (photons) each carry momentum p= hc/l (Giancoli Ch.38) • Maxwell’s theory + Hertz’s experiment: EM waves Modern Physics • • • • • Plancks’s light quanta! explain the photoelectric effect (Einstein); supported by Compton effect; explain the H atom (Bohr) with deBroglie’s matter waves hf = Kmax + F Bohr model • DeBroglie: electrons as waves • Planck: light as particles • Derived H energies match observed spectra Break time! then Spring syllabus: Overview of Ch.9 Stellar Atmospheres 9.1: The radiation field 9.2: Stellar opacity 9.3: Radiative transfer 9.4: The structure of spectral lines Spring weeks 1-2: HW & ML Astrophysics (Carroll & Ostlie) Ch.9 Astronomy (Freedman & Kaufmann) 19: The Nature of Stars 20: The Birth of Stars 21: Stellar Evolution 22: Deaths of stars Physics (Giancoli) 17: Thermal 19: Heat Mathematical Methods (Boas + Spiegel): review differentiation & integration with Matt in QRC • Minilecture signup for Astro & Cosmo • Supper time … then, Seminar in Lib 4004