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Download Linking Asteroids and Meteorites through Reflectance Spectroscopy
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Survey of the Universe Tom Burbine [email protected] Quiz • Next Wednesday • Covers up to today’s material • Absorption lines on the continuous spectrum of the Sun Emission Lines How can you determine velocities? • Doppler Shift – The wavelength of light changes as the source moves towards or away from you • Since you know the wavelength position of emission or absorption features • If the positions of the features move in wavelength position, you know the source is moving • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5KaTfCnDrM So • Source moving towards you, wavelength decreases - blueshift • Source moving away from you, wavelength increases - redshift • Radial velocity – component of motion along the observer’s line of sight – Will produce Doppler Shift • Motion perpendicular to the line of sight will not produce a Doppler shift Formulas • vrad/c = λshift – λrest λrest • • • • • • • Rest wavelength of a line of hydrogen is at 656.285 nm You observe this line at 656.255 nm for a star What is the velocity of this star? vrad/c = (656.255 -656.285)/656.285 nm vrad/c = -4.5712 x 10-5 vrad = -4.5712 x 10-5 *3 x 108 m/s = -13,700 m/s = -13.7 km/s It is blue-shifted so the motion is toward us Telescopes • Why do we use telescopes? Initially • Everybody observed with their eyes Why are Telescopes better than your eyes? • They can observe light in different wavelength regions (eyes can only see visible light) • They can collect more light than eyes • They can be built to compensate for the distorting effects of the atmosphere Telescopes • Telescopes allow astronomers to observe objects that are not visible to the naked eye either because they are too dim or because they emit radiation outside the visible range of the electromagnetic spectrum Atmosphere • Atmosphere absorbs some wavelengths of light and alters the path of light to degrade the quality of images • Space telescopes do not have to worry about the effects of the atmosphere Aperture • The aperture is the opening in a telescope • The larger the aperture, the more light that can be collected • You can see fainter , more distant objects • Resolve more detail http://www.astro.virginia.edu/class/oconnell/astr121/guide14.html To measure light • In the past (until the 1800s to the 1980s), they used photographic plates • Now they use CCDs (charge-coupled devices) • CCD are electronic detectors • CCDs are chips of silicons 1842 image of the Sun Figure 7.5 CCDs • CCDs can collect ~90% of photons that strike them • Photographic plates can only collect ~10% of the photons • CCDs are split into squares called pixels • Data is in electronic form and can be processed easily by a computer • CCDs are resuable • Record images must faster Photoelectric Effect • Photon strikes the semiconductor surface of the CCD • Photon that has sufficient energy causes an electron to become unbound • Electron is then free to move around • Electrical voltages on the surface pull the freed electrons into the nearest pixel • The number of freed electrons per pixel is proportional to the number of photons hitting it • An electronic device connected to a computer counts the number of electrons and generates an image • Albert Einstein won the Nobel prize for explaining the Photoelectric Effect • Described light as composed of discrete quanta, now called photons, rather than continuous waves. Collecting Area • Collecting Area = π/4 * D2 • D is the diameter of the collecting area Large telescopes are expensive to build • Largest telescopes are usually national or international facilities • You need to apply for time to use them Largest Optical Telescope • Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) in the Canary Islands • Mirrors are 10.4 meter diameter • Made up of 36 mirror segments W. M. Keck Observatory • • • • Two telescopes Mirrors are 10 meters in diameter Each made of 36 segments Located on Mauna Kea, Hawaii Largest telescopes • Radio telescopes • Must collect very large numbers of the lowestenergy photons Arecibo Radio Telescope • Located in Arecibo, Puerto Rico • More than 300 meters in diamater • Fixed in a natural basin Filters • • • • • • U- ultraviolet – transmits strongest at 370 nm B – blue - transmits strongest at 420 nm V – visual - transmits strongest at 530 nm R – red - transmits strongest at 600 nm I – infrared - transmits strongest at 800 nm I First telescopes • Used lenses to focus the images • Pioneered by Galileo Focus • Point in an optical system in which light rays are brought together • The location where an image forms in such systems Refracting telescope Figure 7.6 Refraction • Light is bent when it enters a denser material • Light’s speed slows • Different wavelengths of light travel at different speeds • Refracted by different amounts Largest Refractor • Great Refractor at Yerkes Observatory (run by the University of Chicago) • Completed in 1897 • 1.02 m aperture Mirrors • Mirrors can also bring light into a focus • Isaac Newton is given credit for working out a practical design for this Reflecting Telescope Reflecting Telescopes Resulting image inverted All large modern telescopes are reflectors • Since light passes through the lens of a refracting telescope, • You need to make the lens from clear, highquality glass with precisely shaped surfaces • It is easier to make a high-quality mirror than a lens Also, • Large lenses are extremely heavy Also • Lens focuses red and blue light slightly differently • Called chromatic aberration http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lens6a.svg Also • Light can be absorbed by the glass as it passes through the glass • Minor problem for visible, but severe for ultraviolet and infrared light Dispersion • Glass causes light to split into different colors • Use a prism to perform spectroscopy (study spectral lines) Any Questions?