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5. The Nature of Light Light travels in vacuum at m/s

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1 5. The Nature of Light Light travels in vacuum at 3.0 . 108 m/s
Light is one form of electromagnetic radiation Continuous radiation: Based on temperature Wien’s Law & the Stefan-Boltzmann Law Light has both wave & particle properties Each element has unique spectral lines Atoms: A nucleus surrounded by electrons Spectral lines: Electrons change energy levels Spectral lines shift wavelength due to motion

2 Does Light Travel Infinitely Fast?
Some ancient common experiences Lightning & thunder At minimum, light travels faster than easily measured At maximum, light might travel infinitely fast Galileo’s experiments Human reflexes are much too slow Human pulse is much too long Olaus Rømer 1676 Inconsistencies in occultations of Jupiter’s moons Earlier than expected with Jupiter closer than average Later than expected with Jupiter farther than average

3 EMR Travels At Finite Speed
Occultation

4 Light Moves in Vacuum 3.0 . 108 m/s
Light travels at constant speed in vacuum Recognized by Einstein as highest possible speed Independent of the speed of any observer That speed is…c…and is… “celeritas” c = km/s c = m/s c = cm/s Light travels different speeds in different media Air slows light a little Low density Light bends/refracts a little as it enters the atmosphere Glass slows light a lot High density Light bends/refracts a lot as it enters a telescope lens

5 “Light” is Electromagnetic Radiation
“Light” is one form of electromagnetic radiation Electric & magnetic components are sine waves Electric & magnetic components identical wavelengths Electric & magnetic components perfectly synchronized Various regions electromagnetic radiation R Radio Longest λ’s Low energies I Infrared V Visible “Light” Medium energies U Ultraviolet X X-ray G Gamma-ray Shortest λ’s High energies

6 EMR: Electric & Magnetic Waves
Wave properties Electric vector vibrates in a sine wave form vibrates in a single plane Magnetic vector vibrates in a sine wave form vibrates perpendicular to e– vector vibrates synchronized w/e– vector

7 Refraction of Sunlight By a Prism
The “Celebrated Phenomenon of Colours” Red light is refracted least Blue light is refracted most

8 Prisms Do Not Add Color to Light
Newton’s prism experiments Isolate one color from sunlight using one prism Pass that color through a second prism No color is added

9 The Electromagnetic Spectrum

10 Emission & Absorption Spectra
Emission spectra Bright = Hot Looking directly at a hot high-density object Continuous  Hot high-density objects Hot stars with no intervening interstellar gas clouds Bright-line  Hot low-density objects Hot interstellar gas clouds between any star & the Earth Absorption spectra Dark = Cold Not looking directly at a hot high-density object Dark-line  Cool low-density objects Cool interstellar gas clouds

11 Continuous and Line Spectra
Absorption from a cool low density object Emission from a hot Emission from a hot high density object low density object = +

12 The Blackbody Concept Blackbody: An ideal concept Wien’s Law
Absorbs 100% of all wavelengths of incident EMR All X-rays, visible light, radio waves… Experience shows that this is impossible Emits all absorbed energy as blackbody radiation Radiation based exclusively on Kelvin temperature Experience shows that this actually happens Wien’s Law Wavelength at which the most energy is produced Stefan-Boltzmann Law Total energy is proportional to T4

13 Blackbody Curve: The Ideal
“White” stars Our Sun “Red” stars

14 Blackbody Curve: The Sun

15 Wien’s Law Blackbody radiation curves have one peak
This wavelength emits the most energy This wavelength depends on Kelvin temperature lmax = Wavelength of maximum emission (meters) T = Temperature (kelvins) max is inversely proportional to Kelvin temp. Higher temperature  Shorter wavelength

16 The Stefan-Boltzmann Law
Blackbody radiation curves show energy flux This energy flux depends on Kelvin temperature F = Energy flux (joules . m–2 . sec–1 ) s = Constant = –8 W . m–2 . K–4 TK = Temperature (kelvins) Energy is directly proportional to TK4 Raising TK by a factor of 10 raises energy by 10,000

17 The Wave-Particle Nature of EMR
EMR behavior depends on the experiment Wave experiment: EMR behaves like a wave Young’s double-slit experiment Particle experiment: EMR behaves like a particle EMR as photons A quantum amount of EMR energy Energy = Planck’s Constant . Frequency The photoelectric effect Electron emission requires some minimum energy Possible only if photons actually exist

18 Each Element Has a Unique Spectrum
Every material has a unique spectral signature Unique set of spectral lines When hot, the spectral lines are bright When cool, the spectral lines are dark Each spectral line has a unique  Spectroscopy Each spectral line emits a unique amount of energy Kirchhoff’s Laws Hot opaque objects: Continuous spectra Classical blackbody radiation Hot transparent objects: Bright-line spectra Hot interstellar gas clouds with no continuous background Cool transparent objects: Dark-line spectra Cool interstellar gas clouds with a continuous background

19 The Periodic Table of the Elements

20 Spectra: The Hydrogen Family

21 Spectra: The Helium Family

22 Spectra: The Beryllium Family

23 Spectra: The Boron Family

24 Spectra: The Carbon Family

25 Spectra: The Nitrogen Family

26 Spectra: The Oxygen Family

27 Spectra: The Fluorine Family

28 The Bohr Model of the Atom
A central nucleus One or more protons Atomic number Determines the chemical properties (elements) Zero or more neutrons Mass number Determines the nuclear properties (isotopes) Electron orbitals surround the nucleus Neutral atoms: Number of p+ = Number of e– Ionized atoms: Number of p+ ≠ Number of e– Cations: One or more e– lost Net positive charge Anions: One or more e– gained Net negative charge

29 Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom
Electron orbitals are not to scale

30 Hydrogen Electron Transitions

31 Electrons Jump Energy Levels
Electrons jumping energy levels produce lines Hydrogen atom is the simplest of all Lyman series: Ultraviolet spectrum Balmer series: Visible spectrum Paschen series: Infrared spectrum All other atoms & elements are more complicated More considerations about spectral lines Each line has a different amount of energy Energy = Planck’s constant . Frequency Each line has a different probability of jumping More jumps  More energy emitted  Brighter lines

32 Spectra: Hydrogen Energy Levels

33 The Doppler Effect Effect Wavelength shift due to relative motion
Source & viewer moving closer Blue shift Spectral lines shifted toward blue end of the spectrum The spectral lines do not actually appear blue ! ! ! Source & viewer moving farther Red shift Spectral lines shifted toward red end of the spectrum The spectral lines do not actually appear red ! ! ! Cause Relative motion of source & observer Source & viewer moving closer Waves compressed  Shorter wavelength  Blue shift Source & viewer moving farther Waves stretched  Longer wavelength  Red shift

34 Doppler Shift: Stretching Waves
Compressed wavelengths Stretched wavelengths Higher frequencies Lower frequencies Shift toward blue Shift toward red

35 Important Concepts Light in vacuum at constant speed
m . sec–2 Light in other media moves slower Related generally to media density Light is one form of EMR Gamma rays X-rays Ultraviolet Visible Infrared Microwave / Radio Emission & absorption spectra Continuous Hot high density Bright line Hot low density Dark line Cool low density Blackbody concept Absorbs 100% of all wavelengths Emits % at specific wavelengths Wien’s Law Wavelength of maximum energy Stefan-Boltzmann Law Total energy produced Wave-particle duality of all EMR Behavior depends on experiment Photoelectric effect Unique sets of spectral lines Kirchhoff’s three laws Bohr’s mode of hydrogen Nucleus with orbitals Neutral & ionized atoms Electron energy jumps produce lines Doppler effect Relative convergence: Blue shift Relative divergence: Red shift


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