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Astronomy 101 The Solar System Tuesday, Thursday 2:30-3:45 pm Hasbrouck 20 Tom Burbine [email protected]
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Astronomy 101 The Solar System Tuesday, Thursday 2:30-3:45 pm Hasbrouck 20 Tom Burbine [email protected]. Course. Course Website: http://blogs.umass.edu/astron101-tburbine/ Textbook: Pathways to Astronomy (2nd Edition) by Stephen Schneider and Thomas Arny . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Course

Astronomy 101The Solar System

Tuesday, Thursday2:30-3:45 pmHasbrouck 20

Tom [email protected]

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Course

• Course Website:– http://blogs.umass.edu/astron101-tburbine/

• Textbook:– Pathways to Astronomy (2nd Edition) by Stephen Schneider

and Thomas Arny.• You also will need a calculator.

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Office Hours

• Mine• Tuesday, Thursday - 1:15-2:15pm• Lederle Graduate Research Tower C 632

• Neil• Tuesday, Thursday - 11 am-noon • Lederle Graduate Research Tower B 619-O

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Homework

• We will use Spark• https://spark.oit.umass.edu/webct/

logonDisplay.dowebct• Homework will be due approximately twice a

week

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Astronomy Information• Astronomy Help Desk• Mon-Thurs 7-9pm• Hasbrouck 205

•The Observatory should be open on clear Thursdays

• Students should check the observatory website at: http://www.astro.umass.edu/~orchardhill for updated information

• There's a map to the observatory on the website.

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Final

• Monday - 12/14 • 4:00 pm• Hasbrouck 20

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No class this Tuesday

• Space Station Bound: A Day in the Life of a Scientist Astronaut with Cady Coleman '91PhD

• Tuesday, October 13, 2009 • 4:00 pm • Engineering Lab II • Room 119 • Free Admission

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HW #5 (replace)

• Due Today

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HW #7

• Due next Thursday

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HW #8

• Due next Thursday

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October 9 (Tomorrow): 7:30 AM

• LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite)

• LCROSS’ spent Upper-Stage Centaur Rocket will crash into the Moon;s South Pole

• LCROSS will then follow into the Moon• Looking for water • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQ8d2Oacv2M

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New Rings around Saturn

• Seen in the infrared by the Spitzer Telescope• Made of dust and ice; Dust is 80 Kelvin• Lies some 13 million km from the planet• Tilted 27 degrees from main ring plane• 50 times more distant than the other rings and in a different plane. • Probably made up of debris kicked off Saturn's moon Phoebe by small

impacts.

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Why infrared for dust?• Cold things give off more light in infrared than

visible

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Blackbody• A black body is an object that absorbs all

electromagnetic radiation that falls onto it. • Perfect emitter of radiation• Radiates energy at every wavelength

http://www.daviddarling.info/images/blackbody.jpg

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• Stefan-Boltzman Law - energy radiated per unit surface area of a black body in unit time is directly proportional to the fourth power of the black body’s temperature

• Wien’s Law - blackbody curve at any temperature has essentially the same shape as the curve at any other temperature, except that each wavelength is displaced, or moved over, on the graph

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• Stars and planets act can be modeled as blackbodies

http://www.astro.ncu.edu.tw/contents/faculty/wp_chen/Ast101/blackbody_curves.jpg

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Blackbody curves

• http://www.mhhe.com/physsci/astronomy/applets/Blackbody/frame.html

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http://www.rap.ucar.edu/general/asap-2005/Thur-AM2/Williams_DoD_Satellites_files/slide0005_image020.gif

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Power

• Power is in Joules/second = Watts

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Stefan-Boltzman Law• Emitted power per square meter of surface = σT4

• Temperature in Kelvin• σ = 5.7 x 10-8 Watt/(m2*K4)

• For example, if the temperature of an object is 10,000 K• Emitted power per square meter = 5.7 x 10-8 x (10,000)4

• Emitted power per square meter = 5.7 x 10-8 x (1 x 1016)• Emitted power per square meter = 5.7 x 108 W/m2

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Wien’s Law

• Wavelength of Maximum intensity of the blackbody curve peak = 2,900,000 nm

T (Kelvin)• λmax = 2,900,000/10,000 nm

• λmax = 290 nm • 1 nanometer = 1 x 10-9 meters• λmax = 290 nm = 2.0 x 10-7 meters

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When you observe an astronomical body

• You measure intensity• Intensity – amount of radiation

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When you see an object in the sky

• You measure its brightness• Its brightness is a function of its

– Distance from Earth (can be calculated from orbit)If star:-Luminosity - is the amount of energy a body radiates per

unit timeIf planet– Albedo– Size

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Inverse Square Law• The apparent brightness varies inversely by the

square of the distance (1/d2)• If the Earth was moved to 10 Astronomical Units

away, the Sun would be 1/100 times dimmer• If the Earth was moved to 100 Astronomical

Units away, the Sun would be 1/10000 times dimmer

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If the Earth was moved to 1 x 108 Astronomical Units away, the Sun would be …

A) 1 x 10-12 times dimmerB) 1 x 10-14 times dimmerC) 1 x 10-16 times dimmerD) 1 x 10-18 times dimmerE) 1 x 10-20 times dimmer

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If the Earth was moved to 1 x 108 Astronomical Units away, the Sun would be …

A) 1 x 10-12 times dimmerB) 1 x 10-14 times dimmerC) 1 x 10-16 times dimmerD) 1 x 10-18 times dimmerE) 1 x 10-20 times dimmer

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Luminosity-Distance Formula

• Apparent brightness = Luminosity 4 x (distance)2

Usually use units of Solar LuminosityLSun = 3.8 x 1026 Watts

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Magnitude System

• Brighter –lower number

http://www.astronomynotes.com/starprop/appmag.gif

4 Vestabrightest asteroid

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Magnitude difference

Relative intensity

0 11 2.512 6.313 15.84 39.85 10010 104

15 106

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Initially

• Everybody observed with their eyes

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Figure 7.1

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Figure 7.2a

Parallel light Lens

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Figure 7.2b

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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

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Figure 7.6

Refracting telescope

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Reflecting Telescope

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Reflecting Telescopes

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Resulting image inverted

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All large modern telescopes are reflectors

• Since light passes through the lens of a refracting telescope,

• You need to make the lens from clear, high-quality glass with precisely shaped surfaces

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It is

• Its easier to make a high-quality mirror than a lens

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Also,

• Large lenses are extremely heavy

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Also

• Lens focuses red and blue light slightly differently

• Called chromatic aberration

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lens6a.svg

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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

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Size of a telescope

• Diameter of its primary mirror or lens• Light collecting area is proportional to the

diameter squared since• Collecting area = r2

• E.g., 8-meter telescope

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• Telescope that took image b is twice as big as telescope that took image a

• Larger the telescope, more detail can be seen

a b

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• Telescope on Mauna Kea (14,000 feet high)• Telescope is Japanese Subaru 8-m telescope

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Atmosphere

• Atmosphere can absorb light• Atmosphere can scatter light• Atmosphere can distort light (twinkling)

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Twinkling

• Twinkling of stars is caused by moving air currents in the atmosphere.

• The beam of light from a star passes through many regions of moving air while on its way to an observer’s eye or telescope.

• Each atmospheric region distorts the light slightly for a fraction of a second.

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Advantages of space-based telescopes

• It can be open 24 hours, 7 days of week• Do not have to worry about distorting effects of

atmosphere • There is no extra background of light due to

scattering of light in the Earth’s atmosphere• Observe in more wavelength regions

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Figure 7.20

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http://www.scienzagiovane.unibo.it/English/radio-window/images/radiazioni-em.jpg

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• Infrared light absorbed by molecules

http://www.ucar.edu/learn/1_3_1.htm

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Not all light from a star reaches Earth

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Light in space can be affected by dust

http://www.ipac.caltech.edu/2mass/outreach/survey.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rayleigh_sunlight_scattering.png

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It does not help

• That you are closer to the stars

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To measure light

• In the past, they used photographic plates• Now they use CCDs (charge-coupled devices)• CCD are electronic detectors• CCDs are chips of silicons

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Figure 7.5

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CCDs• CCDs convert light into electrons

William Boyle George Smith

Shared the 2009Physics Nobel Prizefor their discovery

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How do they work?• The CCD is made up of pixels.• As the light falls on each pixel, the photons become electrons

due to the photoelectric effect. The photoelectric effect happens when photons of light hit the silicon of the pixel and knock electrons out of place.

• These electrons are then stored.• Essentially, the charge in each row is moved from one

site to the next, a step at a time. This has been likened to a “bucket row” or human chain,

passing buckets of water down a line. • As these buckets of electrons reach the end of the line they are

dumped out and measured, and this analog measurement is then turned into a digital value.

• Thus, a digital grid is made which describes the image.

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Color separation for digital cameras• Colored filters

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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

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Hubble Telescope

• Can observe in visible, infrared, and ultraviolet wavelength regions

• Named after Edwin Hubble, the father of modern cosmology

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Hubble (launched in 1990)

Telescope is the size of a school bus

2.4 m mirror

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Initially• Hubble’s primary mirror was polished to the

wrong shape • Was too flat at the edges• Was barely 2.3 micrometers out from the required

shape (1/50 the width of a human hair)• Images were not focused as well as they could be• Later shuttle mission fixed this problem by

installing a number of small mirrors

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http://dayton.hq.nasa.gov/IMAGES/SMALL/GPN-2002-000064.jpg

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Jupiter

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• http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/science/space-sci/exploration/hubble-sci.html

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Hubble replacement

• The first major components of the new James Webb Space Telescope are now being assembled.

• While Hubble is the size of a bus, the new James Webb will be the size of a jetliner.

• Will launch in 2014• James Webb is a former NASA administrator

during the Apollo program

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• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpkrVw_E6Nw

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Any Questions?