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- Today: End Ch. 5 Tools of Astronomy
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- Large telescopes can collect more light
- Can detect fainter objects
- Have more light for specialized analysis.
- Large telescopes can form more detailed images
- Waves spread out as they go through an opening.
- The larger the opening, the less they spreads out.
- The longer the wavelength the more they spread out
- Angle of spread q
µ l/D where D is Diameter of
telescope
- Radio telescopes have to be much bigger than visible ones
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- Measure brightness of objects (photometry)
- Record images using electronic “CCD” detectors
- Split it into different wavelengths with “spectrometers”
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- “There is no dark side really. It’s all dark.” --
Pink Floyd
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- What is wrong with this picture?
- Front: Not all primary colors (eg, pink, magenta), also refraction
angles inconsistent
- Back: Spectrum is Convergent – I think done for art’s sake
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- Different phenomena produce different wavelength waves
- Ordinary stars: Visible
light
- Cool planets or dust clouds:
Infrared light
- Moving charged particles, cool molecules: Radio waves
- Very hot objects: X-Rays
and Gamma Rays
- Quasars: ALL wavelengths
- Only visible, some IR, and radio make it through atmosphere
- Need to observe from space for other wavelengths
- Going into space also lets you obtain more detailed images
- On Earth telescope size isn’t only limit on image resolution
- Temperature fluctuations in atmosphere cause “seeing”
(blurring)
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- Radio waves
- Microwaves
- Infrared
- Visible
- Ultra-violet
- X-Rays
- Gamma rays
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