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Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6

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Page 1: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Starlight and Atoms

Chapter 6

Page 2: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Amazing Power of StarlightJust by analyzing the light received from a star,

astronomers can retrieve information about a star’s

1. Total energy output

2. Surface temperature

3. Radius

4. Chemical composition

5. Velocity relative to Earth

6. Rotation period

Page 3: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Light and MatterSpectra of stars are

more complicated than pure black body spectra.

characteristic lines, called absorption lines.

To understand those lines, we

need to understand atomic structure and the

interactions between light and

atoms.

Page 4: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Atomic Structure• An atom consists of

an atomic nucleus (protons and neutrons) and a cloud of electrons surrounding it.

• Almost all of the mass is contained in the nucleus, while almost all of the space is occupied by the electron cloud.

Page 5: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

If you could fill a teaspoon just with

material as dense as the matter in an atomic

nucleus, it would weigh ~ 2 billion tons!!

Page 6: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Different Kinds of Atoms• The kind of atom

depends on the number of protons in the nucleus.

Helium 4

Different numbers of neutrons different isotopes

• Most abundant: Hydrogen (H), with one proton (+ 1 electron).

• Next: Helium (He), with 2 protons (and 2 neutrons + 2 el.).

Page 7: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Electron Orbits• Electron orbits in the electron cloud are restricted to

very specific radii and energies.

r1, E1

r2, E2

r3, E3

• These characteristic electron energies are different for each individual element.

Page 8: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Atomic Transitions

• An electron can be kicked into a higher orbit when it absorbs a photon with exactly the right energy.

• All other photons pass by the atom unabsorbed.

Eph = E4 – E1

Eph = E3 – E1

(Remember that Eph = h*f)

Wrong energy• The photon is absorbed, and the electron is in an excited state.

Page 9: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Color and Temperature

Orion

Betelgeuse

Rigel

Stars appear in different colors,

from blue (like Rigel)

via green / yellow (like our sun)

to red (like Betelgeuse).

These colors tell us about the star’s

temperature.

Page 10: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Black Body Radiation (I)

The light from a star is usually concentrated in a rather narrow

range of wavelengths.

The spectrum of a star’s light is approximately a thermal

spectrum called black body spectrum.

A perfect black body emitter would not reflect any radiation. Thus the name ‘black body’.

Page 11: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Two Laws of Black Body Radiation

2. The peak of the black body spectrum shifts towards shorter wavelengths when the temperature increases.

Wien’s displacement law:

max ≈ 3,000,000 nm / TK

(where TK is the temperature in Kelvin).

1. The hotter an object is, the more luminous it is.

Page 12: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Color Index (I)B band

V bandThe color of a star is measured by comparing its brightness in

two different wavelength bands:

The blue (B) band and the visual (V) band.

We define B-band and V-band magnitudes just as we did before for total magnitudes

(remember: a larger number indicates a fainter star).

Page 13: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Color Index (II)

We define the Color Index

B – V(i.e., B magnitude – V magnitude)

The bluer a star appears, the smaller the color index B – V.

The hotter a star is, the smaller its color index B – V.

Page 14: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Kirchhoff’s Laws of Radiation (I)1. A solid, liquid, or dense gas excited to emit

light will radiate at all wavelengths and thus produce a continuous spectrum.

Page 15: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Kirchhoff’s Laws of Radiation (II)2. If light comprising a continuous spectrum

passes through a cool, low-density gas, the result will be an absorption spectrum.

Light excites electrons in atoms to higher energy states

Frequencies corresponding to the transition energies are absorbed from the continuous spectrum.

Page 16: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Kirchhoff’s Laws of Radiation (III)3. A low-density gas excited to emit light will do

so at specific wavelengths and thus produce an emission spectrum.

Light excites electrons in atoms to higher energy states

Transition back to lower states emits light at specific frequencies

Page 17: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Spectra of StarsInner, dense layers of a

star produce a continuous (black body) spectrum.

Cooler surface layers absorb light at specific frequencies.

=> Spectra of stars are absorption spectra.

Page 18: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Most prominent lines in many astronomical objects: Balmer lines

of hydrogen

Lines of Hydrogen

Page 19: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Balmer Lines

n = 1

n = 2

n = 4

n = 5n = 3

H H H

The only hydrogen lines in the visible wavelength range.

Transitions from 2nd to higher levels of hydrogen

2nd to 3rd level = H (Balmer alpha line)2nd to 4th level = H (Balmer beta line)

Page 20: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Absorption spectrum dominated by Balmer lines

Modern spectra are usually recorded digitally and represented as plots of

intensity vs. wavelength

Page 21: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Emission nebula, dominated by the red H line.

Page 22: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Balmer ThermometerBalmer line strength is sensitive to temperature:

Almost all hydrogen atoms in the ground state (electrons in the n = 1 orbit) => few transitions from n =

2 => weak Balmer lines

Most hydrogen atoms are ionized => weak Balmer lines

Page 23: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Measuring the Temperatures of Stars

Comparing line strengths, we can measure a star’s surface temperature!

Page 24: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Spectral Classification of Stars (I)

Tem

pera

ture

Different types of stars show different characteristic sets of absorption lines.

Page 25: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Spectral Classification of Stars (II)

Page 26: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Oh Oh Only

Be Boy, Bad

A An Astronomers

Fine F Forget

Girl/Guy Grade Generally

Kiss Kills Known

Me Me Mnemonics

Mnemonics to remember the spectral sequence:

Page 27: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Stellar spectra

OB

A

F

G

KM

Surface tem

perature

Page 28: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Composition of StarsFrom the relative strength of absorption lines (carefully accounting for their temperature dependence), one can

infer the composition of stars.

Page 29: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about
Page 30: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

The Doppler Effect

Blue Shift (to higher frequencies)

Red Shift (to lower frequencies)

The light of a moving source is blue/red

shifted by

/0 = vr/c

0 = actual wavelength

emitted by the source

Wavelength change due to

Doppler effect

vr = radial velocity

vr

Page 31: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Example (I):Earth’s orbital motion around the sun causes a radial velocity towards (or away from) any star.

Page 32: Starlight and Atoms Chapter 6. The Amazing Power of Starlight Just by analyzing the light received from a star, astronomers can retrieve information about

Example (II):Take of the H (Balmer alpha) line:

0 = 656 nmAssume, we observe a star’s spectrum

with the H line at = 658 nm. Then, = 2 nm.

We find = 0.003 = 3*10-3

Thus,

vr/c = 0.003, or

vr = 0.003*300,000 km/s = 900 km/s.The line is red shifted, so the star is receding

from us with a radial velocity of 900 km/s.