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the change in direction as light travels from one medium into another |
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resulting spread of colors from refraction |
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Wavelength: distance from peak to peak (measured in nm) Longest wavelength to shortest: red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet -shorter the wavelength, the more the light is refacted Long wave lengths: little energy Short wavelength: lots of energy Light travels at finite speed and takes longer to travel farther distances -Light waves of all wavelengths travel at the same speed through a vacuum (space) Radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultra violet, x-ray, gamma rays |
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Distance light travels in a year |
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number of peaks to pass a certain point Greater the frequency the shorter the wave length will be Large frequency: short wavelength (ultraviolet etc. ) Small frequency: long wavelength (radio waves) |
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particle of light (energy of photon depends on wavelength) |
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Blueshift –if each successive wave is emitted from a position slightly closer to viewer (rather than being stationary), see shorter wavelength and you will see blue regardless of distance (and vise versa if the object is moving away from you)-redshiftDoppler shift both are also called a Doppler shift varies directly with approaching or receding speed—faster moving objects has color red/blue shifted twice as much as a slower moving object |
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Light also acts as a particle: Different wave lengths have different energy (shorter wavelengths were able to knock off electrons from metal surface and long wavelengths could not)—different energy values: shorter lengths have more energy than the longer wave lengths |
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electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths slightly longer than red light |
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electromagnetic radiation a few centimeters in wavelength (long waves) |
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machine that produces electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths shorter than 10nm |
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Differneces between wavelengths: why they are considered different |
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Similar properties: all photons, travel same speed, sometimes behave as particles and sometimes waves -but because of their wavelength and thus their different energies, interact differently with matter Longer-wavelengths penetrate through earth’s atmosphere (radio waves, some infrared radiation, visible light, and some uv) |
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Telescopes (Refractory, and Reflecting) |
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Main objective of telescope: to capture light Refracting telescope-collect light through lenses -lenses still used in eyepieces of telescope to help brains accurately interpret what is seen, and in small telescopes at home(cameras etc) Reflecting telescope-collect light through mirrors -modern telescopes use mirrors for light collecting -Concave mirror in shape of a parabola will cause incoming light to converge at a focal point |
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Distance between the primary mirror and the focal point |
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-if object is larger than a point, like moon or planet converge to a plane rather than a point |
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Difference in mirros (light collection) |
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Larger mirror collects more light than a smaller one—light-gathering power related directly to primary mirror (mirror with twice the diameter of another mirror has 4x the area of the smaller mirror and collects 4x the light) A= Pi x d^2/4 |
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measures clarity of image—smaller the angle the sharper the image (larger telescopes better) |
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make objects appear larger—related to resolution Magnification= focal length of primary mirror/focal length of the eyepiece(larger better) |
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Charge-coupled devices (CCD) |
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respond to 70% of light falling on them –resolution better than film |
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total energy emitted from an object per second |
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the brightness an object appears to have as viewed at a distance (further away, the dimmer it looks) |
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Measure apparent brightness Measure luminosity (need temperature, and need size of object) Compare luminosity to apparent brightness to determine distance; problem is size of object is rarely known and is hard to measure |
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Light, more properly "visible light," is one form of electromagnetic radiatoin. All electromagnetic radiation (radio waves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, X rays, and gamma rays) has both wave and particle properties. |
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What type of electromagnetic radiation is most dangerous to life? (pg 91) |
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Gamma rays have the highest energies of all photons, so they are the most dangerous to life. However, ultraviolet radiation from the sun is the most common everyday form of dangerous electromagnetic radiation we encounter |
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Why do stars twinkle? (pg 91) |
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Rapid changes in the density of the Earth's atmosphere cause passing starlight to change directions, making stars apperar to twinkle |
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