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- Properties of light are fundamental
- Almost everything we know about the universe outside our solar system
comes from interpreting the light from distant objects.
- Light is weirder than you think
- Here are some slides I’ve used for introductory astronomy as a
guide to some properties of light.
The math here might be useful in figuring out your own stories
involving light.
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- Something that “radiates”, or spreads out in
“rays”
- High speed particles (eg. high speed neutrons ejected from a
disintegrating atomic nucleus)
- Electromagnetic radiation:
- Towards shorter “wavelength” and higher energy:
- Visible light, Ultraviolet light, X-Rays, Gamma-Rays
- Towards longer “wavelength” and lower energy:
- Visible light, Infrared radiation, microwaves, radio waves
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- Light has both wave and particle properties
- Travels like a wave
- Interacts with matter like a particle: “photon”
- Full explanation involves quantum mechanics
- For most cases we can just choose the right “model” from
the above two choices
- Photons, unlike particles in other kinds of “radiation,”
are particles of “pure energy”
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- Changing electric fields generates magnetic fields
- Changing magnetic fields generates electric fields
- Can set up a cycle where one field causes the other:
- The E and B fields oscillate in strength, and the disturbance moves
forward.
- To describe the wave you need to specify
- Direction it is moving
- Strength of the fields (its intensity)
- Frequency or Wavelength of the oscillation (u and l are inversely related)
- Orientation of the electric E field: up or sideways (polarization)
- You do not need to specify its speed
- In a vacuum all lightwaves move at the same speed c = 3´108
m/s
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- Radio waves
- Microwaves
- Infrared
- Visible
- Ultra-violet
- X-Rays
- Gamma rays
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- Short wavelength Þ High
energy photons
- Long wavelength Þ Low energy photons
- Intensity µ
total energy (per area per second)
µ
(# of photons per area per second)
´
(energy per photon)
- Example with falling rain:
- Amount of rain µ (# of raindrops) ´ (volume per drop)
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- Real life example:
Ultra-Violet light hitting your skin
- Threshold for chemical damage set by energy (wavelength) of photons
- Below threshold (long wavelengths) energy too weak to cause chemical
changes
- Above threshold (short wavelength) energy photons can break apart DNA
molecules
- Number of molecules damaged = number of photons above threshold
- Very unlikely two photons can hit exactly together to cause damage
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- Inverse relationship:
Smaller l
means more energetic
- c = speed of light = 3.00 ´ 108 m/s
- h = Planck’s constant = 6.63 ´ 10-34 joule/s
- Note: Joule is a unit of
energy
1 Joule/second = 1 Watt
- Energy of a single photon of 0.5 mm visible light?
- Seems very small, but this is roughly the energy it takes to chemically
modify a single molecule.
- Photons from a 100 W lightbulb
(assuming all 100W goes into light?)
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- Thermal energy is “kinetic energy” of moving atoms and
molecules
- Hot material energy has more energy available which can be used for
- Chemical reactions
- Nuclear reactions (at very high temperature)
- Escape of gasses from planetary atmospheres
- Creation of light
- Collision bumps electron up to higher energy orbit
- It emits extra energy as light when it drops back down to lower
energy orbit
- (Reverse can happen in absorption of light)
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- Want temperature scale where energy is proportional to T
- Celsius scale is “arbitrary” (Fahrenheit even more so)
- 0o C
= freezing point of water
- 100o C = boiling point of water
- By experiment, available energy = 0 at “Absolute Zero” =
–273oC
(-459.7oF)
- Define “Kelvin” scale with same step size as Celsius, but
0K = -273oC = Absolute Zero
- Use Kelvin Scale for most of work in this course
- Available energy is proportional to T, making equations simple (really!
OK, simpler)
- 273K = freezing point of water
- 373K = boiling point of water
- 300K approximately
room temperature
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- Hot objects glow (emit light)
- Heat (and collisions) in material causes electrons to jump to high
energy orbits
- As electrons drop back down, some of energy is emitted as light.
- Reason for name “Black Body Radiation”
- In a “solid” body the close packing of the atoms means than
the electron orbits are complicated, and virtually all energy orbits
are allowed. So all
wavelengths of light can be emitted or absorbed. (In a gas with isolated atoms,
only certain orbits are permitted so only certain wavelengths can be
absorbed or emitted.)
- A black material is one
which readily absorbs all wavelengths of light. These turn out to be the same
materials which also readily emit all wavelengths when hot.
- The hotter the material the more energy it emits as light
- As you heat up a filament or branding iron, it glows brighter and
brighter
- The hotter the material the more readily it emits high energy (blue)
photons
- As you heat up a filament or branding iron, it first glows dull red,
then bright red, then orange, then if you continue, yellow, and
eventually blue
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- Planck formula gives intensity of light at each wavelength
- It is complicated.
We’ll use two simpler formulae which can be derived from
it.
- Wien’s law tells us what wavelength has maximum intensity
- Stefan-Boltzmann law tells us total radiated energy per unit area
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- What is wavelength at which you glow?
- Room T = 300 K so
- This wavelength is about 20 times longer than what your eye can
see. Camera in class
operated at 7-14 μm.
- What is temperature of the sun – which has maximum intensity at
roughly 0.5 mm?
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- Hot solids emit continuous spectra
- Hot gasses try to do this, but can only emit discrete wavelengths
- Cold gasses try to absorb these same discrete wavelengths
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- Molecules: Multiple atoms
sharing/exchanging electrons
(H2O, CH4)
- Ions:
Single atoms where one or more electrons have escaped (H+)
- Binding energy: Energy
needed to let electron escape
- Permitted “orbits” or energy levels
- By rules of quantum mechanics, only certain “orbits” are
allowed
- Ground State: Atom with
electron in lowest energy orbit
- Excited State: Atom with at
least one atom in a higher energy orbit
- Transition: As
electron jumps from one energy level orbit to another,
atom must
release/absorb energy different, usually in form of light.
- Because only certain orbits are allowed, only certain energy jumps are
allowed, and atoms can absorb or emit only certain energies
(wavelengths) of light.
- In complicated molecules or “solids” many orbits and
transitions are allowed
- Can use energy levels to
“fingerprint” elements and estimate temperatures.
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- Energy absorbed/emitted depends on upper and lower levels
- Higher energy levels are close together
- Above a certain energy, electron can escape (ionization)
- Series of lines named for bottom level
- To get absorption, lower level must be occupied
- Depends upon temperature of atoms
- To get emission, upper level must be occupied
- Can get down-ward cascade through many levels
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