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Lecture 13. Light: the Cosmic Messenger Telescopes and Observational Astronomy. The Doppler Effect. Finding recession velocity. the Doppler shift can be written: v = Dl/l 0 c where = v is the recession velocity of the object Dl is the change in wavelength, l - l 0
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Lecture 13 Light: the Cosmic Messenger Telescopes and Observational Astronomy
Finding recession velocity the Doppler shift can be written: v = Dl/l0 c where = v is the recession velocity of the object Dl is the change in wavelength, l-l0 l0 is the wavelength in the rest frame
Doppler shift: example • Remember that the Ha line of Hydrogen has a rest wavelength of l0 = 656.285 nm. In the star Vega, this line appears at a wavelength of l = 656.255 nm. • is Vega moving towards or away from us? • what is the radial velocity of Vega?
Another example: Hydrogen emits and absorbs photons with a wavelength of 21.12 cm, in the radio. This famous line is called the 21-centimeter line. The galaxy NGC3840 is moving away from us at a speed of 7370 km/s. At what wavelength would we expect to detect the 21-cm line from this galaxy?
The Sun as a Blackbody • The peak wavelength of the Sun’s light is about 500 nm. What is the surface temperature of the Sun? • we can use Wien’s law: T = (2.9 x 106 nm)/lpeak = (2.9 x 106 )/(500 nm) T = 5800 K
The luminosity of the Sun is 3.90 x 1026 W. Find the temperature of the Sun. • this time we’re going to use the Stephan-Boltzman law: F = [5.7 x 10-8 W/(m2 x K4)] T4 first we need to find the flux at the Sun’s surface. remember flux = energy/area so Fsun = Lsun/(4pR2sun) Rsun = 6.96 x 108 m F = 6.41 x 107 W m-2 • now we use T = (F/ 5.7 x 10-8 W/(m2 x K4))1/4 T = 5800 K
Other Stars and our Sun • Sirius is the brightest star in the night sky. It appears blue and its peak flux is at 280 nm, in the UV. • is Sirius hotter or cooler than our Sun? What is its temperature? • compare the energy flux at the surface of Sirius with that at the surface of our Sun.
Summary: • spectra consist of continuum, emission lines, and absorption lines • by studying the spectra of distant objects we can learn about their composition, surface temperature, radial velocity, and internal velocity.
There are two kinds of telescopes • Refracting: a lens is used to focus the light from distant objects • Reflecting: a primary mirror is used to gather and focus light.
Fundamental Telescope Properties • Light collecting area (diameter of primary mirror or lens) • angular resolution (smallest angular distance that can be resolved clearly) • diffraction limit (limitation on angular resolution due to light diffraction) -- depends on diameter of primary and wavelength of light being observed • limited by effects of Earth’s atmosphere
Angular Separation a = 360o. s /(2pd) “small angle formula”
The Diffraction Limit diffraction limit = 2.5 x 105 x wavelength of light (arcsec) diameter of telescope Find the diffraction limit of the 2.4 m Hubble Space Telescope for visible light (500 nm). d.l. = 2.5 x 105 (500 x 10-9 m/2.4 m) = 0.05 arcsec
Where to put your telescope • high and dry – to minimize the blurring effects of the Earth’s atmosphere and emission/absorption from water vapor • away from light pollution • with roads, electricity, and other support systems nearby
Basic Functions of Telescopes • Imaging/photometry • photometry involves accurate measurement of the light intensity • filters can be used to separate into different colors • spectroscopy • light spread out using a diffraction grating • time sequence • how an object’s brightness changes with time (supernovae, gamma ray bursts…)