Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
courses:phy100:3 [2023/06/21 01:13] – [4. Unistellar eQuinox] asad | courses:phy100:3 [2023/06/22 11:41] (current) – [5. Seeing the invisible] asad | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
===== - Light ===== | ===== - Light ===== | ||
- | Light can be described both as a **particle** and a **wave**. Light is made of particles called **photons** and waves called **electromagnetic waves**. Let us try to understand light as a wave first. | + | Light can be described both as a **particle** and a **wave**. Light is made of particles called **photons** and (at the same freaking time) waves called **electromagnetic waves**. Let us try to understand light as a wave first. |
The best way to visualize a wave is to use the example of a //water wave//. In the following video, you see the largest replica of an ocean created inside a huge dome by US Navy. They use this indoor ocean the size of a football field for experimenting with the effect of waves on oceangoing ships. | The best way to visualize a wave is to use the example of a //water wave//. In the following video, you see the largest replica of an ocean created inside a huge dome by US Navy. They use this indoor ocean the size of a football field for experimenting with the effect of waves on oceangoing ships. | ||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
You can see the relationship between wavelength and frequency in the above simulation. Change the frequency using the slider and see what happens to the wavelength. You can also vary the amplitude and time. Varying the time would make the wave travel horizontally right or left. | You can see the relationship between wavelength and frequency in the above simulation. Change the frequency using the slider and see what happens to the wavelength. You can also vary the amplitude and time. Varying the time would make the wave travel horizontally right or left. | ||
- | Light can also be thought of as made of particles called **photons** and the energy of these photons are directly related to the frequency | + | Light can also be thought of as made of **particles** called **photons** and the energy of these photons are directly related to the frequency |
===== - Color ===== | ===== - Color ===== | ||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
The wavelength here is given in **nano-meters** (nm). So the shades of violet have wavelengths between 380 nm and 450 nm. Shades of blue have wavelengths between 450 nm and 495 nm. The range for green is 495--570 nm, for yellow 570--590 nm, for orange 590--620 nm and, finally, the wavelengths for giving the shades of red vary from 620 nm to 750 nm. Notice that the **ultraviolet** (to the left of violet) and **infrared** (to the right of red) parts are blackish because we cannot see those colors. Ultraviolet radiation from the sun is harmful for us and our body radiates infrared light to get rid of our excess energy as heat. | The wavelength here is given in **nano-meters** (nm). So the shades of violet have wavelengths between 380 nm and 450 nm. Shades of blue have wavelengths between 450 nm and 495 nm. The range for green is 495--570 nm, for yellow 570--590 nm, for orange 590--620 nm and, finally, the wavelengths for giving the shades of red vary from 620 nm to 750 nm. Notice that the **ultraviolet** (to the left of violet) and **infrared** (to the right of red) parts are blackish because we cannot see those colors. Ultraviolet radiation from the sun is harmful for us and our body radiates infrared light to get rid of our excess energy as heat. | ||
- | |||
- | Check the following GIF animation to get the relative frequency corresponding to these wavelengths. | ||
{{https:// | {{https:// | ||
- | Sunlight is originally white. [[un: | + | Sunlight is originally white. [[un: |
One way you can feel closer to the concept of color is via clothes. In the classroom students are wearing clothes of different colors. Let us say the teacher brings to the front seven students who are wearing clothes of seven different colors of the rainbow: violet, indigo (dark blue), blue, green, yellow, orange and red. You can see the clothes because light reflected from them is reaching your eyes. But why do they have different colors. | One way you can feel closer to the concept of color is via clothes. In the classroom students are wearing clothes of different colors. Let us say the teacher brings to the front seven students who are wearing clothes of seven different colors of the rainbow: violet, indigo (dark blue), blue, green, yellow, orange and red. You can see the clothes because light reflected from them is reaching your eyes. But why do they have different colors. | ||
Line 62: | Line 60: | ||
This is the ' | This is the ' | ||
- | Why are some colors (light at some wavelengths or frequencies) missing? The sun emits smooth light, meaning it emits light at all colors from violet to red. But the sun has an atmosphere where there are many different chemical | + | Why are some colors (light at some wavelengths or frequencies) missing? The sun emits smooth light, meaning it emits light at all colors from violet to red. But the sun has an atmosphere where there are many different |
A and B lines are created by oxygen molecules, C lines by hydrogen atoms, D by sodium, E by iron, and G, H and K by calcium. So the dark ' | A and B lines are created by oxygen molecules, C lines by hydrogen atoms, D by sodium, E by iron, and G, H and K by calcium. So the dark ' | ||
===== - Telescopes ===== | ===== - Telescopes ===== | ||
- | {{https:// | + | A telescope works almost the way our eyes work. Our eyes are made of lenses that can bend light to focus them around a single point as shown below. |
- | {{https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Chromatic_aberration_lens_diagram.svg/640px-Chromatic_aberration_lens_diagram.svg.png?nolink}} | + | {{https://askabiologist.asu.edu/sites/default/files/resources/articles/seecolor/eye-anatomy-1000.jpg?nolink&500}} |
- | {{https://upload.wikimedia.org/ | + | The lens produced an inverted image of the leaf on the back of the eye in a plane called the retina. There are receptors in retina that convert the photons of light to chemical signals and then send them to the brain via the optic nerve as electrical signals. That means our vision has 3 components: the **collector** (lens), the **sensor** (retina) and the **processor** (brain). A modern telescope also has exactly these 3 components. |
+ | |||
+ | In case of modern telescopes, a mirror is used as the collector for focusing light. The sensor is made of an electronic device called the [[un:CCD]] that can convert photons to electrons. The electrons are then sent from the sensor to a computer that works as the processor. So the mirror is like the lens of our eyes, the CCD is like the retina and the computer is like the brain. Let us see how the collector (or reflector) works. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{:courses: | ||
+ | |||
+ | This is a typical ' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Modern telescopes do not have eyepieces. Astronomers do not look through an eyepiece anymore. Instead, they take pictures of the sky using sensors, receivers or detectors which will discuss in the next section. This section is dedicated to the collector. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The initial collectors or reflecting mirrors were spherical, but large **spherical** mirrors cannot focus light properly and we do need large mirrors to collect as much light as possible. To solve this problem, **parabolic** mirrors were invented. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | Small spherical mirrors can focus all parallel rays onto a single point $F$ at a distance $f$ from the mirror. But in case of large spherical mirrors, different rays meet at different points. If we cannot focus all the rays onto a single point, we cannot detect properly using a sensor which cannot be at multiple places at the same time. If all light are focused at a single point, a sensor located there would be able to receive all of them. This is why parabolic mirrors were made in the 17th and 18th centuries. They are more curved then a spherical mirror (left panel) and their shape is not described by a circle but a parabola. All modern telescopes use parabolic reflectors. | ||
{{https:// | {{https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | Here is a comparison of the largest current and planned visible-light telescopes. Extremely large mirrors are now made using multiple smaller pieces. For example, the mirror of the recently-sent James Webb Space Telescope (lower left) is made of 18 hexagonal segments. | ||
+ | |||
===== - eVscope and eQuinox ===== | ===== - eVscope and eQuinox ===== | ||
+ | In this course, you will use an eQuinox telescope made by Unistellar for your final project. Unistellar makes two models: eVscope and eQuinox. The eVscope has a live projection system in place of an eyepiece so that people can have a sneak-peek of what the telescope is observing. The eQuinox does not have any eyepiece or live projection system. Both models work in a similar way. The telescope creates a WiFi network that you connect to using your phone. Then you can open the ' | ||
+ | |||
{{: | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | The telescope has the same 3 parts mentioned above: collector, sensor, processor. The collector, however, is made of a single mirror. There is no secondary mirror at the focal point of this mirror, but the sensor is placed there instead. The sensor converts all light reflected by the mirror into electrons. The electrons are sent to the ' | ||
{{: | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | The parts are more clearly identified in this diagram of an eQuinox. The integrated battery located at the bottom of the tube can give backup for almost 10 hours, that is one night of observing time. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This telescope does not enlarge the image but rather, like all modern telescopes, take high-**resolution** pictures of various objects of the sky. If it has high resolution, you can always zoom in using a computer and see more details of the object. The ' | ||
+ | |||
+ | The ' | ||
===== - Seeing the invisible ===== | ===== - Seeing the invisible ===== | ||
+ | There are light waves beyond ultraviolet at the high-frequency end and beyond infrared at the low-frequency end. Heinrich Hertz detected such a wave for the first time and named it ' | ||
+ | |||
{{: | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | X-rays and gamma-rays are shorter (higher frequency) than visible light and radio and microwaves are longer (lower frequency) than visible light as shown above. There are telescopes custom-made for detecting light at all these wavelengths or frequencies. The ultraviolet and infrared wave are not shown here, but we have telescopes for detecting those light as well. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | This figure shows the opacity (opposite of transparency) of Earth' | ||
+ | |||
+ | And radio astronomy is having a huge boost similar to some other branches of astronomy. Around the year 2030, the largest scientific facility in the world will be a radio telescope so large that it spans two continents: Africa and Oceania. The telescope, named the **[[https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{youtube> | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | I did my postdoctoral research with the SKA and continue to collaborate with the SKA community from IUB. | ||
+ |
courses/phy100/3.1687331610.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/06/21 01:13 by asad