Schools and Colleges

 

Projects

Episode 702: Red shift

 

Changes in wavelength of spectral lines allow us to determine the motion of astronomical objects relative to ourselves.

 

Summary

Discussion: Red shift. (10 minutes)

Discussion: The Doppler effect. (10 minutes)

Demonstration: Doppler effect for sound. (20 minutes)

Demonstration: Doppler effect with microwaves. (20 minutes)

Discussion: Speed and frequency. (10 minutes)

Student questions: Binary stars. (20 minutes)

 

Discussion:

Red shift

The wavelengths of spectral lines emitted by atoms in an astronomical object are often increased compared to a similar source in the laboratory. We see the same pattern of lines (so we can recognize the elements from which they arise), but the whole pattern is shifted to longer wavelengths. The colour is not necessarily actually red, or even visible. Red shift simply means an increase or shift to a longer wavelength. (For visible light, this means towards the red end of the spectrum.)

There are two distinct explanations: the Doppler effect (due to relative motion of source and observer) and the Cosmological Red Shift (due to the expansion of space).

Both effects result in the same formula for calculating speed v of the object emitting the light.

 

Discussion:

The Doppler effect

 

Waves emitted from a moving source

 

 


The Doppler effect is common to all types of wave motion. It is characteristic of a wave that:

  • Its frequency depends on its source.
  • Its velocity depends on the medium through which it moves. (Its velocity is not affected by the motion of the source.)
  • It is the wave’s wavelength that is affected by relative motion.

 

Demonstration:

Doppler effect for sound

Show the Doppler effect for sound using a whirling loudspeaker.

When approaching you (the detector), the crests bunch up as the source is catching up with the wave; l gets smaller, so f gets larger because fl is a constant c, i.e. pitch rises.

Travelling away from the detector, source gets away from the wave, crests stretched out and the pitch drops.

 

TAP 702-1: The Doppler effect

 

Demonstration:

Doppler effect with microwaves

You can show the Doppler effect for microwaves reflected by a moving barrier.

 

TAP 702-2: Doppler shift using microwaves

 

Discussion:

Speed and frequency

Derive the relationship Dl / l = Df / f = v / c. This says that the fractional change in wavelength or frequency is equal to the ratio of the speed of the source to the speed of light.

 

TAP 702-3: Doppler derivation for light

 

TAP 702-4: The Doppler shift

 

 

Doppler shifted spectrum

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The consequence is that the frequencies of spectral lines change in proportion. NB many text books have diagrams that do not really show the increasing separation of spectral lines with wavelength, as though all the lines in a spectrum were shifted by an equal amount rather than by an equal fraction. The diagram above shows the correct version.

An interesting example: the Sun rotates, and its light is therefore Doppler shifted. The radiation from the side approaching the Earth is blue shifted; the radiation from the side moving away from the Earth is red shifted. The speed of rotation can be determined from these frequency shifts.

 

TAP 702-5: Doppler shifts from part of a galaxy

 

Student questions:

Binary stars

When two stars orbit about one another, one may be moving towards us (blue shift), and the other away (red shift).

 

TAP 702-6: Binary stars

 

  

Download Word version of Episode 702 (180 KB)

 

 

previous episode             next episode

 

 

 

 

^ To the top ^

 
Artwork | Image by Fred Swist