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... Q&A: Light, color, and
the electromagnetic spectrum (cont'd) ...
| 5. How are wavelength
and temperature related? |
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All objects emit electromagnetic radiation, and the amount of radiation
emitted at each wavelength determines the temperature of the object.
Hot objects emit more of their light at short wavelengths, and cold
objects emit more of their light at long wavelengths. The radiation
temperature of an object is related to the wavelength at which the object
gives out the most light. We refer to the amount of light emitted at
a particular wavelength as the intensity.
When you plot the intensity of light from an object at each wavelength,
you trace out a smooth curve called a blackbody curve. For any temperature,
the blackbody curve shows how much energy (intensity) is radiated at
each wavelength. The wavelength where the intensity peaks determines
the color of that the object. The intensity peak will be at shorter
(bluer) wavelengths for hotter objects, and at longer (redder) wavelengths
for cooler objects. Therefore, you can tell the temperature of a star
or galaxy by its color because color is closely related to the wavelength
at which its light intensity peaks.
Blackbody curves, for objects of all temperatures, have a similar shape,
as shown in the graph below. However, the peak of the curve for a hotter
object will be larger (more intense) than will the peak of the curve
for a cooler object. For example, the intensity difference between the
peak of the curve for an object at 30,000 K and the peak of the curve
for an object at 300 K (body temperature) is a factor of 10 billion.
This means that a star at 30,000 K puts out more energy by a factor
of 10 billion than does a human at body temperature.
Because of the large intensity difference, it would be difficult to
show both of these curves on the graph above without using logarithms.
To plot blackbody curves with large intensity differences on the Heating
Up page of Amazing Space's "Star Light, Star Bright," the
scale of the intensity axis adjusts itself for each temperature change.
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| 6. How are
temperature and color related? |
The amount of light produced by an object at each wavelength
depends on the temperature of the object producing the light. Stars hotter
than the Sun (over 6000 degrees C) put out most of their light in the
blue and ultraviolet regions of the spectrum. Stars cooler than the Sun
(below 5000 degrees C) put out most of their light in the red and infrared
regions of the spectrum. Solid objects heated to 1000 degrees C appear
red but are putting out far more (invisible) infrared light than red light. |
| 7. What information
can light reveal about the stars? |
Electromagnetic radiation, or light, is a form of energy.
Visible light is a narrow range of wavelengths of the electromagnetic
spectrum. By measuring the wavelength or frequency of light coming from
objects in the universe, we can learn something about their nature. Since
we are not able to travel to a star or take samples from a galaxy, we
must depend on electromagnetic radiation to carry information to us from
distant objects in space.
The human eye is sensitive to a very small range of wavelengths called
visible light. However, most objects in the universe radiate at wavelengths
that our eyes cannot see. Astronomers use telescopes with detection
devices that are sensitive to wavelengths other than visible light.
This allows them to study objects that emit this radiation, which would
otherwise be invisible to us. Computer techniques then code the light
into arbitrary colors that we can see.
The Hubble Space Telescope is able to measure wavelengths from about
0.1150 to 2 micrometers, a range that covers more than just visible
light. These measurements of electromagnetic radiation enable astronomers
to determine certain physical characteristics of objects, such as their
temperature, composition, and velocity.
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| 8. Why does
Hubble need to take images using non-visible light? |
|
The human eye is sensitive to a very small range of wavelengths called
visible light. However, many celestial objects in the universe radiate
at wavelengths that our eyes cannot see
and each type of radiation
provides clues as to the nature of the object in question. Astronomers
study celestial objects with detection devices that are sensitive to
wavelengths other than visible light and then use computer techniques
that code the light into colors that we can see.
Able to measure wavelengths from about 115 nanometers to 2500 nanometers,
the Hubble Space Telescope looks at the energy that is not only visible,
but also infrared and ultraviolet. These measurements better enable
astronomers to determine physical characteristics of objects, such as
their temperature, composition, and velocity.
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| 9. Why do
scientists need filters, and how do they work? |
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Different wavelengths of light provide scientists with different information
about the objects they are studying. For instance, infrared light can
reveal details about objects shrouded in dust. Infrared light emitted
by an object will pass through dust unlike visible light, which
is scattered. In contrast, ultraviolet light can reveal details about
the stellar wind around stars. (When talking about our sun, this is
called the solar wind.) Astronomers have ways of breaking light into
a spectrum, which reveals a lot of information (including properties
of the source of the light, the material through which the light passes,
or the material off of which the light reflects).
However, sometimes scientists want to capture specific ranges of wavelengths
of light, so they use a filter. A filter will allow only light within
a small range of wavelengths to pass through. When the Hubble Space
Telescope takes an image using a filter, that image shows only the varying
intensity of light in that small range. In making color pictures, scientists
usually use a red filter, a green filter, and a blue filter (the red
filter allows light only in the red range to enter, etc.). By combining
these images scientists can create full-color pictures.
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| 10. What are the
special electronic detectors that the Hubble Space Telescope uses to record
light? |
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Hubble uses professional-grade versions of the same detectors found
in a digital camera. Each optical instrument on the telescope has a
set of charge-coupled devices (CCDs) composed of a grid of pixels (picture
elements) that measure the intensity of light that strikes them. For
example, one instrument (the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2) has
four CCDs, each of which contains 640,000 pixels. Each pixel turns the
light intensity it measures into a number.
These numbers are systematically downloaded to the Space Telescope
Science Institute where they are translated into black-and-white images.
Using computers, two or more of these images can be colorized and combined
to produce a color image. CCDs are used only for optical light. Ultraviolet
and infrared light have different detectors, which are not called CCDs
but operate on similar principles.
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| 11. Why
choose red, green, and blue as the assigned colors for images? |
The colors red, green, and blue are chosen because they
are the primary colors of light. By combining these colors of light, white
light is produced. Combinations of two of these colors produce other familiar
colors: blue + green = cyan, red + blue = magenta, and red + green = yellow.
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| 12. How
are the colors assigned to the black and white images? |
If red, green, and blue filters have been used, the
red filter is assigned red light, the green filter is assigned green light,
and the blue filter is assigned blue light. This changes the black-and-white
scale into tones of red, green, and blue, respectively. Using computers,
these images can be combined into one image, which represents (as close
as possible) the true colors of the object being imaged. In general, when
other filters are used, blue is assigned to the shortest wavelength light
while red is assigned to the longest wavelength, with green being the
wavelength in the middle. |
| 13. What
objects does the Hubble Space Telescope observe and why? |
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The Hubble Space Telescope takes observations of almost every part
of the sky, as long as it isn't toward the Sun. In our own solar system,
the telescope can take incredibly detailed pictures of the outer planets
and their moons. A crescent of Venus has been taken with the Hubble
Space Telescope and the moon has been shot once, but Mercury is too
close to the Sun to be imaged.
Farther out, Hubble takes images of stars and nebulae in our own galaxy
as well as in galaxies in the larger universe. The majority of Hubble's
time is used for scientific research, taking many observations of specific
objects that the scientists are studying. However, a very small portion
of Hubble's time is dedicated to taking beautiful pictures for public
enjoyment.
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