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courses:phy100:3 [2023/06/21 02:16] – [3. Telescopes] asad | courses:phy100:3 [2023/06/22 11:41] (current) – [5. Seeing the invisible] asad | ||
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===== - 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. | ||
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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 ' | ||
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===== - 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 ' | ||
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+ | 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 ' | ||
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+ | 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. | ||
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+ | 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 ' | ||
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===== - 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 ' | ||
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+ | 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. | ||
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+ | This figure shows the opacity (opposite of transparency) of Earth' | ||
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+ | 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:// | ||
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+ | I did my postdoctoral research with the SKA and continue to collaborate with the SKA community from IUB. | ||
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courses/phy100/3.1687335418.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/06/21 02:16 by asad