Exploring Space
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Transcript Exploring Space
Exploring Space
Radiation from Space
Electromagnetic Radiation
• Stars give off different wavelengths of
light that make up the spectrum.
• Light travels as a transverse wave.
• Transverse waves have crests and
troughs.
• The distance from one crest to another
is called the wavelength.
• The frequency is the number of wave
crests that pass a certain point over
time.
crest
wavelength
trough
• Radio waves (longest)
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Microwaves
Infrared
Visible (R.O.Y.G.B.I.V.)
Ultraviolet
X-Rays
Gamma Rays (shortest)
• Speed of light ≈ 300,000 km/s
• All forms of light travel at the same
speed.
• A Light Year (ly) is the distance it
takes light to travel in one year.
• About 9.46 trillion km/year
According to Einstein's theory of
special relativity objects gain mass
as they speed up, and that speeding
up requires energy. The more mass,
the more energy is required. By the
time an object reached the speed of
light, Einstein calculated, its mass
would be infinite, and so would the
amount of energy required to
increase its speed. To go beyond the
infinite is impossible.
Optical Telescopes
• Telescopes that use light to produce
magnified images of objects.
Refracting Telescopes
Refraction is the bending of light as
it passes through different
materials.
A convex lens is used to bend the
light and is magnified.
Galileo built the 1st refractor.
Refraction & Refracting Telescopes
Reflecting Telescopes
Telescopes that use concave
mirrors to reflect the light from an
object to a focal point.
Hubble Space Telescope
Launched in 1990
Placed in high Earth orbit, free of
atmospheric distortion.
Radio Telescopes
Used to map the Universe
Detects objects
Search for signs of intelligent life
on other planets
Early Space Missions
To leave orbit, spacecraft must move faster than 11 km/s
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Law of Inertia
An object in motion will stay in
motion, an object at rest will stay at
rest.
An outside force will change the
inertia.
Inertia
Law of Acceleration (Force)
An accelerated mass creates
force.
F = ma
Newton (N) = kg • m/s2
a
Law of Action/Reaction
For every action (force), there is an
equal action in the opposite
direction.
Reaction
Action
Rocketry
Solid Fueled Rockets
Solid fueled rockets were invented
by the Chinese.
Difficult to control
Liquid Fueled Rockets
Dr. Robert Goddard successfully
launched the first liquid fueled
rocket in 1926.
Rocketry is based on Newton’s 3rd
Law of Motion
Action
Reaction
• Notable Rockets:
German V-2 Rocket of WWII
USA Saturn V Rocket for the
Moon missions.
Apollo
Artificial Satellites
• Satellites are objects that orbit around
another large object.
• Sputnik I was the 1st satellite to orbit
Earth (Russia, 1957)
• Hundreds of satellites orbit the Earth
today (weather, GPS, communications,
etc.)
• Satellites maintain their orbit as a result of
gravity & inertia counteracting each other.
• “Falling around Earth”
Inertia
Resulting Orbit
Gravity
Space Probes
• Satellites with instruments that travel
away from the Earth.
• Some orbit distant objects while
others land on surfaces.
Galileo studied Europa (one of
61 moons of Jupiter), Europa
may have an ocean and heat
under it’s ice. Maybe life!
• Notable Space Probes:
Mars:
• Vikings I & II (1974)
• Mariner Program
(Mercury, Venus also)
• Mars Pathfinder
w/ rover (1998)
• Spirit & Opportunity
(2004)
Venus:
• Venera program
(1960s-1970s)
• Magellan Program
Outer Planets & Objects
• Voyagers I & II
• Galileo (Jupiter)
• Cassini-Huygens
(Saturn & Titan)
• New Horizons (Pluto)
• Stardust probe (comet)
• NEAR-Shoemaker (asteroids)
Manned
Space
Missions
Yuri Gagarin was the first person in
space! Alan Shepard was the first
American in space. Neil Armstrong was
the first person on the moon. Who was
second?
Space Shuttle Program
• A set of reusable, Earth orbiting
spacecrafts by NASA.
• First launch in 1981 (Columbia)
• Other space shuttles include:
Challenger
Discovery
Atlantis
Endeavour
Challenger Disaster
Shuttle blew apart 73 seconds into its
mission. (January 1986)
Columbia Disaster
Shuttle broke apart during re-entry to the
Earth’s atmosphere 16 minutes before
landing (February 2003)
• The shuttles will be decommissioned in
2010 to prepare for missions to the moon.
• (Endeavour was originally scheduled to be decommissioned in
2010 after 18 years of service, but on July 1, 2010, NASA released
a statement saying the shuttle Endeavour mission was
rescheduled for February 27, 2011, instead of late November,
2010.)[
Space Stations
U.S. Skylab (1973-1979)
U.S. only solo attempt at building a
space station.
Study the effects
of living
& working
in space.
Crashed into the
Indian Ocean in
1979
Mir (1986-2001)
Russia’s 7th space station
Only supposed to last 5 years.
De-orbited in 2001 into the Pacific Ocean
International Space Station (ISS)
Construction began in space in 1998
16 countries involved
Support 7 crew members for 3-6 months
when finished.