Chapter 06
Chapter 06
Chapter 06
(presentation mode).
Chapter 6
Light and Telescopes
Guidepost
Previous chapters have described the sky as it appears
to our unaided eyes, but modern astronomers turn
powerful telescopes on the sky. Chapter 6 introduces us
to the modern astronomical telescope and its delicate
instruments.
The study of the universe is so challenging, astronomers
cannot ignore any source of information; that is why they
use the entire spectrum, from gamma rays to radio
waves. This chapter shows how critical it is for
astronomers to understand the nature of light.
In each of the chapters that follow, we will study the
universe using information gathered by the telescopes
and instruments described in this chapter.
Outline
I. Radiation: Information from Space
A. Light as a Wave and a Particle
B. The Electromagnetic Spectrum
V. Space Astronomy
A. Infrared Astronomy
B. Ultraviolet Astronomy
C. X-Ray Astronomy
D. Gamma-Ray Telescopes
E. Cosmic Rays
F. The Hubble Space Telescope
Light and Other Forms of
Radiation
• The Electromagnetic Spectrum
c = 300,000 km/s =
3*108 m/s
1 nm = 10-9 m
1 Å = 10-10 m = 0.1 nm
E = h*f
Wavelength
Frequency
High
Need satellites flying air
to observe planes or
satellites
Optical Telescopes
Astronomers use
telescopes to gather
more light from
astronomical objects.
Reflecting
Telescope:
Concave Mirror
focuses light
onto the focal
Focal length
plane
Almost all modern telescopes are reflecting telescopes.
Secondary Optics
In reflecting
telescopes:
Secondary
mirror, to re-
direct light path
towards back or
side of
incoming light
path.
Eyepiece: To
view and
enlarge the
small image
produced in
the focal
plane of the
primary
optics.
Refractors and Reflectors
Disadvantages of Refracting
Telescopes
• Chromatic aberration: Different
wavelengths are focused at different Can be
focal lengths (prism effect). corrected, but
not eliminated
by second lens
out of different
material.
A = (D/2)2
The Powers of a Telescope (2)
2. Resolving power: Wave nature of
light => The telescope aperture
produces fringe rings that set a
limit to the resolution of the
telescope.
Secondary mirror
The 4-m
Mayall
Telescope
at Kitt Peak
National
Observatory
(Arizona)
Advances in Modern Telescope Design
Modern computer technology has made
possible significant advances in telescope
design:
1. Lighter mirrors with lighter support structures,
to be controlled dynamically by computers
Interferometry
CCD Imaging
CCD = Charge-coupled device
• More sensitive than
photographic plates
• Data can be read
directly into computer
memory, allowing easy
electronic manipulations
Negative image to
enhance contrasts
NASA’s
Chandra X-ray
Observatory
Gamma-Ray Astronomy
Gamma-rays: most energetic electromagnetic radiation;
traces the most violent processes in the Universe
The Compton
Gamma-Ray
Observatory
The Hubble Space Telescope
• Launched in 1990; • Avoids
maintained and turbulence in
upgraded by several the Earth’s
space shuttle service atmosphere
missions throughout
the 1990s and early • Extends
2000’s imaging and
spectroscopy
to (invisible)
infrared and
ultraviolet
New Terms
electromagnetic radiation light-gathering power
wavelength resolving power
frequency diffraction fringe
Nanometer (nm) seeing
Angstrom (Å) magnifying power
photon light pollution
infrared radiation prime focus
ultraviolet radiation secondary mirror
atmospheric window Cassegrain focus
focal length Newtonian focus
refracting telescope Schmidt-Cassegrain focus
reflecting telescope sidereal drive
primary lens, mirror equatorial mounting
objective lens, mirror polar axis
eyepiece alt-azimuth mounting
chromatic aberration active optics
achromatic lens adaptive optics
New Terms (continued)
interferometry
charge-coupled device (CCD)
false-color image
spectrograph
grating
comparison spectrum
radio interferometer
cosmic ray
Discussion Questions
1. Why does the wavelength response of the human
eye match so well the visual window of Earth’s
atmosphere?
a. Red
b. Orange
c. Green
d. Blue
*e. Violet
Quiz Questions
2. The entire electromagnetic spectrum can be divided into the
seven bands of Radio, Microwave, Infrared, Visible, Ultraviolet,
X-ray, and Gamma-ray (from longest to shortest wavelength).
To which of these two bands is Earth's atmosphere the most
transparent?
a. Large mirrors can now be made thinner and lighter than before.
b. Tracking celestial objects today is computer controlled and can
take advantage of simpler, stronger mounts.
c. High-speed computing today can be used to reduce the effect of
Earth's atmosphere.
d. Both b and c above.
*e. All of the above.
Quiz Questions
11. In which device do astronomers take advantage of
chromatic aberration?