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Multiwavelength Astronomy
How do infrared pictures of people and X-rays of hands related to astronomy?
Simple. Infrared cameras and X-ray film can give us new views of
commonplace things on Earth, but similar techniques can be used to give us
new information about things in space! Many things in space, like the Sun,
the stars, our Galaxy, and other exotic objects like pulsars and black holes,
emit light at many different energies.
Light has different colors because it has different energies. This is true
whether we are talking about red and blue visible light, or infrared (IR)
and X-ray light. Of all the colors in the visible spectrum, red light is
the least energetic and blue is the most.
Beyond the red end of the visible part of the spectrum lies infrared and
radio light, both of which have lower energy than visible light. Above the
blue end of the visible spectrum lies the higher energies of ultraviolet
light, X-rays, and finally, gamma-rays.
How Do Telescopes Observe Different Energies ofLight?
Optical telescopes are built to detect visible light waves and then to
reflect the light using mirrors, or refract (bend) it with lenses,
focusing it
into an image. Because radio light is low energy, it tends to behave more
like a wave, so most radio telescopes are dishes made of conducting metal
that reflects radio waves to a focus, just as an optical mirror reflects
visible light. Some infrared measurements can be made from the ground, but
the majority of them are made from satellites to cut down on atmospheric
absorption of infrared photons. X-rays and gamma-rays can only be collected
from space because our atmosphere absorbs them.
When we compare measurements of the same region of the sky taken in
different energy ranges, it becomes obvious how important multiwavelength
observations are. Compare the below images, all of the entire sky, centered
on our Galaxy. All are dominated by emission from our Galaxy, some from
the Galactic center region (as in the X-ray image), others from the
disk of our Galaxy (as in the infrared image).
Because of light's unique properties, it can be described in terms of either
its energy, its wavelength, or its frequency. X-rays and gamma-rays are
usually described in terms of energy, optical and infrared light in terms of
wavelength, and radio in terms of frequency. This is a scientific convention
that allows the use of the units that are the most convenient for describing
whatever energy of light you are looking at. For example, it would be
inconvenient
to describe both low energy radio waves and high energy gamma-rays with the
same units because the difference in their energies is so great (4 x
10-10 eV for radio as opposed to 4 x 109 eV for
gamma-rays).
Wavelength is distance between two peaks of a wave, usually measured in terms
of the base unit, the meter (m). The frequency of light is the number of
cycles per second, or Hertz (Hz). Energy in astronomy is often measured in
electron Volts, or eV. Wavelength and frequency are all related
by the speed of light (which is a constant). Energy is also mathematically
related to wavelength and frequency by a
constant that we call Planck's constant (h) because Planck was the one to
discover
this relationship between them. This relationship says that energy (E)
divided by frequency (the Greek letter nu) is a constant, and since we
know
that frequency is equal to the speed of light (c) divided by wavelength
(the Greek letter lambda), we have the relationship between energy
and wavelength.
In addition, light has what we call particle-wave duality, meaning that
light can act like both a particle and a wave. The amount of energy a
photon has makes it sometimes behave more like a wave and sometimes more like
a particle. We call particles of light photons. Low energy photons (such as
radio) tend to behave more like waves, while higher energy photons (such as
X-rays) behave more like particles. This is an important difference
because it affects the way we build instruments to measure light.
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