Light and Spectra: Background
Light and Spectra: Background
Light can tell us a great deal about astronomical objects.
In fact, it can often tell us what the objects are made of! In this portion of
the lab you'll discover how scientists use spectrometers to figure
out what distant stars are made of.
Light actually comes in waves. The length of the wave determines
the color of the light. When you look at white light, you're actually looking
at lots of different colors of light, all mixed together! We will use a
tool called a spectrometer to figure out the different wavelengths
of the light we are looking at. The spectrometer contains a diffraction
grating, which splits the light into different wavelengths. Our spectrometers
are pretty simplistic, but conceptually are the same as spectrometers in
the most advanced telescopes.
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
One nice feature of the Universe is that different elements (hydrogen, helium,
oxygen, uranium, ...) like to emit different wavelengths (colors) of light. Each
element has a unique set of specific colors. So if we have
different elements in a lab, and we measure the specific wavelengths for those
elements, we can actually identify those same elements in the farthest
galaxies, just by splitting apart the light from the galaxy!.
The reason each element has this unique "fingerprint" is that the atoms of
each element have small particles called electrons, which can jump between
levels where they have different energies. When they jump down, they give off
a certain amount of light. The farther they jump, the shorter the light waves
are (this means they are more blue). But each element has a different set of
levels, and so each gives off its own specific set of colors.