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Radio waves, visible light, X-rays, and all the other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum are fundamentally the same thing, electromagnetic radiation. |
We may think that radio waves are completely different physical objects or events than gamma-rays. They are produced in very different ways, and we detect them in different ways. But are they really different things? The answer is 'no'. Radio waves, visible light, X-rays, and all the other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum are fundamentally the same thing. They are all electromagnetic radiation.
Electromagnetic radiation can be described in terms of a stream of photons, which are massless particles each traveling in a wave-like pattern and moving at the speed of light. Each photon contains a certain amount (or bundle) of energy, and all electromagnetic radiation consists of these photons. The only difference between the various types of electromagnetic radiation is the amount of energy found in the photons. Radio waves have photons with low energies, microwaves have a little more energy than radio waves, infrared has still more, then visible, ultraviolet, X-rays, and ... the most energetic of all ... gamma-rays.
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The electromagnetic spectrum can be expressed in terms of energy, wavelength, or frequency. |
Actually, the electromagnetic spectrum can be expressed in terms of energy, wavelength, or frequency. Each way of thinking about the EM spectrum is related to the others in a precise mathematical way. So why do we have three ways of describing things, each with a different set of physical units? After all, frequency is measured in cycles per second (which is called a Hertz), wavelength is measured in meters, and energy is measured in electron volts.
The answer is that scientists don't like to
use big numbers when they don't have to. It is much easier to say or
write "two kilometers or 2 km" than "two thousand meters or 2,000 m". So
generally, scientists use whatever units are easiest for whatever they
are working with. In radio astronomy, astronomers tend to use
wavelengths or frequencies. This is because most of the radio part of
the EM spectrum falls in the range from a about 1 cm to 1 km (30
gigahertz (GHz) to 100 kilohertz (kHz)). The radio is a very broad part
of the EM spectrum. Infrared astronomers also use wavelength to describe
their part of the EM spectrum. They tend to use microns (or millionths
of meters) for wavelengths, so that they can say their part of the EM
spectrum falls in the range 1 to 100 microns. Optical astronomers use
wavelengths as well. In the older "CGS" version of the
metric system, the units used were
angstroms. An Angstrom is equal to 0.0000000001 meters (10-10
m in
scientific notation)! In the newer "SI"
version of the metric system, we think of visible light in units of
nanometers or 0.000000001 meters (10-9 m). In this system,
the violet, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red light we know so well
has wavelengths between 400 and 700 nanometers. This range is only a
small part of the entire EM spectrum, so you can tell that the light we
see is just a little fraction of all the EM radiation around us! By the
time you get to the ultraviolet, X-ray, and gamma-ray regions of the EM
spectrum, lengths have become too tiny to think about any more. So
scientists usually refer to these photons by their energies, which are
measured in electron volts. Ultraviolet radiation falls in the range
from a few electron volts (eV) to a about 100 eV. X-ray photons have
energies in the range 100 eV to 100,000 eV (or 100 keV). Gamma-rays then
are all the photons with energies greater than 100 keV.
Show me a chart of the wavelength, frequency, and energy regimes of the
spectrum !
Electromagnetic radiation from space is unable to reach the surface of the Earth except at a very few wavelengths, such as the visible spectrum, radio frequencies, and some ultraviolet wavelengths. Astronomers can get above enough of the Earth's atmosphere to observe at some infrared wavelengths from mountain tops or by flying their telescopes in an aircraft. Experiments can also be taken up to altitudes as high as 35 km by balloons which can operate for months. Rocket flights can take instruments all the way above the Earth's atmosphere for just a few minutes before they fall back to Earth, but a great many important first results in astronomy and astrophysics came from just those few minutes of observations. For long-term observations, however, it is best to have your detector on an orbiting satellite ... and get above it all!
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