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Electromagnetic Spectrum gy: low medium

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Electromagnetic Spectrum. Energy: low  medium  high. Electromagnetic Radiation: Quick Facts. There are different types of EM radiation, visible light is just one of them EM waves can travel in vacuum, no medium needed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Electromagnetic Spectrum

Energy: low medium high

Page 2: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Electromagnetic Radiation: Quick Facts

• There are different types of EM radiation, visible light is just one of them

• EM waves can travel in vacuum, no medium needed• The speed of EM radiation “c” is the same for all

types and very high ( light travels to the moon in 1 sec.)

• The higher the frequency, the smaller the wavelength ( f = c)

• The higher the frequency, the higher the energy of EM radiation (E= h f, where h is a constant)

Page 3: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Visible Light• Color of light determined

by its wavelength

• White light is a mixture of all colors

• Can separate individual colors with a prism

Page 4: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Three Things Light Tells Us

• Temperature – from black body spectrum

• Chemical composition– from spectral lines

• Radial velocity– from Doppler shift

Page 5: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Temperature Scales

Fahrenheit Centigrade Kelvin

Absolute zero 459 ºF 273 ºC 0 K

Ice melts 32 ºF 0 ºC 273 K

Human body temperature

98.6 ºF 37 ºC 310 K

Water boils 212 ºF 100 ºC 373 K

Page 6: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Black Body Spectrum• Objects emit radiation of all frequencies,

but with different intensities

Higher Temp.

Lower Temp.Ipeak

Ipeak

Ipeak

fpeak<fpeak <fpeak

Page 7: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Cool, invisible galactic gas

(60 K, fpeak in low radio

frequencies)

Dim, young star

(600K, fpeak in infrared)

The Sun’s surface

(6000K, fpeak in visible)

Hot stars in Omega Centauri

(60,000K, fpeak in ultraviolet)

The higher the temperature of an object, the higher its Ipeak and fpeak

Page 8: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Wien’s Law

• The peak of the intensity curve will move with temperature, this is Wien’s law:

Temperature * wavelength = constant

= 0.0029 K*m

So: the higher the temperature T, the smaller the wavelength, i.e. the higher the energy of the electromagnetic wave

Page 9: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Example

• Peak wavelength of the Sun is 500nm, so T = (0.0029 K*m)/(5 x 10-7 m) = 5800 K

• Instructor temperature: roughly 100 F = 37C = 310 K, so

wavelength = (0.0029K*m)/310 K

= 9.35 * 10-6 m

= 9350 nm infrared radiation

Page 10: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Measuring Temperatures

• Find maximal intensity

Temperature (Wien’s law)

Identify spectral lines of ionized elements Temperature

Page 11: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Color of a radiating blackbody as a function of temperature

• Think of heating an iron bar in the fire: red glowing to white to bluish glowing

Page 12: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Kirchhoff’s Laws: Dark Lines

Cool gas absorbs light at specific frequencies

“the negative fingerprints of the elements”

Page 13: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Kirchhoff’s Laws: Bright lines

Heated Gas emits light at specific frequencies “the positive fingerprints of the elements”

Page 14: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Kirchhoff’s Laws

1. A luminous solid or liquid (or a sufficiently dense gas) emits light of all wavelengths: the black body spectrum

2. Light of a low density hot gas consists of a series of discrete bright emission lines: the positive “fingerprints” of its chemical elements!

3. A cool, thin gas absorbs certain wavelengths from a continuous spectrum dark absorption ( “Fraunhofer”) lines in continuous spectrum: negative “fingerprints” of its chemical elements, precisely at the same wavelengths as emission lines.

Page 15: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Spectral Lines – Fingerprints of the Elements

• Can use this to identify elements on distant objects!

• Different elements yield different emission spectra

Page 16: Electromagnetic Spectrum

Spectral Lines • Origin of discrete spectral lines: atomic structure of matter

• Atoms are made up of electrons and nuclei– Nuclei themselves are made up

of protons and neutrons

• Electrons orbit the nuclei, as planets orbit the sun

• Only certain orbits allowed Quantum jumps!

Page 17: Electromagnetic Spectrum

• The energy of the electron depends on orbit• When an electron jumps from one orbital to

another, it emits (emission line) or absorbs (absorption line) a photon of a certain energy

• The frequency of emitted or absorbed photon is related to its energy

E = h f

(h is called Planck’s constant, f is frequency)