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The Electromagnetic Spectrum. PHYSICS 1. Somnath Bharadwaj and Pratik Khastgir, Department of Physics and Meteorology, IIT Kharagpur, 721 302 India http://www.cts.iitkgp.ernet.in/~phy1/. Radio wave. Less than 1 GHz. Microwave. 1 GHz to 3 10 11 Hz. 30 cm to 1 mm.
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The Electromagnetic Spectrum PHYSICS 1 • Somnath Bharadwaj and Pratik Khastgir, Department of Physics and Meteorology, IIT Kharagpur, 721 302 India http://www.cts.iitkgp.ernet.in/~phy1/
Radio wave Less than 1 GHz
Microwave 1 GHz to 3 1011 Hz 30 cm to 1 mm
Space communication Atmosphere is transparent from less than 1 cm to 30 m Also suitable for radio astronomy
Radio Interferometric Arrays 32 MHz bands with 128 separate channels
HI in Galaxies DDO 210 Source: Begum and Chengalur Dwarf Irregular Galaxy
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation T=2.73 K CMBR
Molecular Rotations Water 2.45 GHz used in microwave ovens Excites Rotations of water molecules 50 GHz to 10 THz T-rays
Infrared 3 1011 Hz to 4 1014 Hz Near IR 760 - 3000 nm Intermediate IR 3000 - 6000 nm Far IR 6000 - 15000 nm Extreme IR 15000nm – 1 mm Human body peaks at 10000 nm
Visible Light 3.84 1014 Hz to 7.69 1014 Hz Mainly atomic transitions – outer levels Hot bodies ~5000K
Ultraviolet 8 1014 Hz to 3 1016 Hz Enough energy to ionize atoms in upper atmosphere Is harmful – absorbed by O3 in upper atmosphere Produced in energetic atomic transitions
X-ray 2.4 1016 Hz to 5 1019 Hz Energetic electrons incident on a metal Hot astrophysical sources – Black Holes Inner shell transitions in atoms
Centaurus Cluster Credit: J. Sanders, A. Fabian,
Gamma Rays Frequency greater than 5 1019 Hz Produced in nuclear transitions Electron-positron annihilation Easy to detect – ionizes gas