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Spectral Lines

Spectral Lines. Celestial Fingerprinting. Continuum Spectra. The Sun. A Continuum Spectrum: Light emitted across a continuous range of wavelengths. A blackbody spectrum is a continuum spectrum. But what are these?. Heat some gas and it will glow.

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Spectral Lines

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  1. Spectral Lines Celestial Fingerprinting

  2. Continuum Spectra The Sun • A Continuum Spectrum: • Light emitted across a continuous range of wavelengths. • A blackbody spectrum is a continuum spectrum. • But what are these?

  3. Heat some gas and it will glow. Pass the light through a slit to get a narrow source. Pass light from the slit through a prism. Get multiple images of the slit, each at a different wavelength. These “lines” are the element’s “finger print”. Spectral Lines Spectrometer

  4. Emission Lines • Every element has a DIFFERENT finger print.

  5. Multiple elements • Gases, stars, planets made up of MANY elements have spectra which include ALL of the component spectral lines. • It’s the scientist’s job to figure out which lines belong to which element.

  6. Absorption Lines • Pass light at all wavelengths through a gas. • Pass this light through our spectrometer. • We see the continuum spectrum. • Now it’s MISSING those same spectral lines.

  7. HOT The Sun You COOL Courtesy of NOAO/AURA

  8. Helium • The element Helium (He) was first discovered on the Sun by its spectral lines.

  9. Different stars, different spectra Hot • Different stars have different types of spectra. • Different types of spectra mean different stars are made of different elements. Stellar Spectra Cool

  10. How does this work? • There are different energy levels an electron can be in: Floors in a building. • Lowest state is called the Ground State. • Higher states are different Excited States.

  11. Changing Levels • If you add the RIGHT amount of energy to an atom, the electrons will jump up energy floors. • If the electron drops down energy floors, the atom gives off the same amount energy. • From before, LIGHT IS ENERGY: E = hn = hc/l

  12. Kirchhoff’s Laws • Light of all wavelengths shines on an atom. • Light of an energy equal to the difference between “floors” will be absorbed and cause electrons to jump up in floors. • The rest of the light passes on by to our detector. • We see an absorption spectrum: light at all wavelengths minus those specific wavelengths.

  13. Kirchhoff’s Laws Cont… • Eventually, the excited electrons drop back down to their ground floors. • Light of the precise energy difference between floors is given off. • This light goes off in all directions. • From a second detector, we see these specific energy wavelengths: an emission spectrum.

  14. To Sum Up… • EVERY element has a SPECIAL set of lines. • Atom’s fingerprint. • Observe the lines and you identify the component elements. • Identify: • Absorption spectrum • Emission emission Learn about the environment of the element

  15. Doppler Shift • The greater the velocity the greater the shift.

  16. Redshifts • Spectra of galaxies outside our own. • Each is moving through space. • Results in Doppler shifted spectral lines.

  17. So Now… • From the presence and position of Spectral Lines we know: • Composition (H, He, H2O, etc.) • Conditions (hot, cold, etc.) • Movement through space (towards or away) • How fast? as a fraction of the speed of light:c

  18. Even scientists make mistakes. Huygens probe communicates to Cassini Spacecraft via radio. As probe and spacecraft separate they pick up speed (V) with respect to one another. Resulting Dl is too great for the Cassini radio receiver! Cassini Problems

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