Mercury,
November/December 2004 Table of Contents
by
Preethi Pratap and Madeleine Needles
It
is a bright sunny day in Mary Altenhof's astronomy class at
Marlborough High School in Massachuestts. Students are clustered
in several groups and intently peering at their equipment. One group,
near a window, is drawing sunspot positions on a piece of paper
using a Sunspotter solar telescope. Another group is setting up
a soda-bottle magnetometer to attempt to measure variations in Earth's
magnetic field. A third group is in front of a computer screen operating
a small radio telescope that is parked in the lot outside the classroom
window. But they all have one goal—studying the Sun, our nearest
star, the one that has the most effect on our lives.
One
of the tools these students are using—a radio telescope—explores
an invisible part of the electromagnetic spectrum, radio waves.
While radio waves may be invisible to our eyes, their uses permeate
our daily lives. To exploit fully the many uses of radio waves,
we need to understand them and the mechanisms that produce them.
From
listening to music on the radio to talking on our cell phones, radio
waves are the means used to get information across large distances.
Neil Armstrong used the power of radio waves to let the world know
that for the first time a human had set foot on the Moon. The little
Voyager spacecraft used radio waves to send back magnificent images
of distant planets and the Mars rovers use radio waves to send back
pictures of a red, rocky planet. Closer to us, radio waves are used
not just for news, music, and television, but also as a way for
police and firemen to react quickly to emergencies.
Radio
waves also give us information about the Universe complementing
information obtained at other wavelengths. Radio astronomers use
large antennas to collect radio waves from all over the Universe.
These data tell us about the energetic processes happening at the
very centers of galaxies, permit us to peer deeply into stellar
nurseries where stars of all sizes form, and give us valuable information
about the rich chemistry that occurs all over the Milky Way Galaxy.
Other than visible light and some infrared light, radio waves are
the only other part of the electromagnetic spectrum that Earth's
atmosphere will allow to pass! But radio waves from the Universe
are very weak, so astronomers have developed many techniques to
detect this emission from objects very far away.
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