Color
This project shows students the brilliant colors of stars, then teaches them
why stars come in so many colors. Answering this question takes them through the
definition of color in astronomy, the nature of thermal (blackbody) radiation,
and the use of colored telescope filters.
For more information on how astronomers use color, and on the physical meaning of
color, read the About Astronomy: Stars
section of SkyServer, or look in an astronomy or physics textbook. Here
are a few possible references:
Halliday, David, Jearl Walker, and Robert Resnick, Fundamentals of Physics,
John Wiley and Sons, 2000
Hartmann, William K., Astronomy: the Cosmic Journey, Wadsworth, 1989
Kaler, James, Extreme Stars, Cambridge University Press, 2001
Project Goals
By the end of the project, students should be able to:
Recognize the rich variety of colors in the night sky
Ask scientific questions about everyday phenomena
Know that light is a wave, and explain the relationship between
wavelength and observed color
Know the order of the visible spectrum, from red to violet, and the
total spectrum, from radio waves to gamma rays
Explain how telescope filters are used in astronomy
Explain that stars is related to the peak wavelength of light
they emit. Explain why red, orange, yellow, and blue stars are common, while stars
with other colors from the visible spectrum are rare
Look up data using several interfaces
Compare the astronomical definition of color to visual color
Calculate the radiant flux of a star from its magnitude
Work with identities among logarithms
Understand that hot objects give off more thermal radiation than cool
objects
Explain how the peak wavelength of thermal radiation changes as
objects heat up
Calculate peak wavelength of thermal radiation from temperature
Explain the limitations of finding stellar temperature from color alone
Find peak wavelengths of observed stellar spectra
Understand why more filters allow more confidence in determining temperature
Qualitatively understand how to find astronomical colors from a
thermal radiation curve
Make simple x-y graphs
Identify cool and hot stars on different color-color diagrams
Use data to judge when a scientific analysis is appropriate
Infer the existence of unusually red stars (red giants) from a
color-color diagram
Understand the differences between Population I and Population II stars
Predict the thermal signatures of stars, planets, galaxies, quasars, and
the universe
Prepare, execute, and interpret an independent scientific research project
Background Knowledge
Before beginning this project, students should:
know that stars come in different colors
know that light is composed of waves with definite wavelengths and frequencies
know what stars, galaxies, and the universe are
know that hot objects glow, and that heat and light are related
have some experience with scientific reasoning
have mathematics experience up to and including Algebra I.
know how to look up information using a web-based interface, such as a
search engine
have some familiarity with a spreadsheet program (such as Microsoft Excel)
The section "Color and Amounts of Light," including Exercises 2-4, requires that
students multiply and divide using logarithms. If your students are not comfortable
using logarithms, you may skip this section.
They should also have basic computer skills. They should know how to look up information
using a Web-based interface. It is helpful to know how to use Microsoft Excel or some other
graphing program, but not necessary.
Project Structure
The Color project is a long-term project, designed to take about 11 hours to
complete. You may wish to assign some parts as homework. The project can be divided
into five chapters:
Chapter 1: Introduction and Exploration |
1 hour |
Chapter 2: Definition of Color in Astronomy |
2 hours |
Chapter 3: Color and Temperature |
3 hours |
Chapter 4: Color-Color Diagrams |
4 hours |
Chapter 5: Other Objects/Research Challenge |
1 hour |
Chapter 1 begins with the Introduction and ends with the Colors of Stars in the SDSS.
Chapter 2 begins with The Definition of Color in Astronomy and ends with Light from Stars.
Chapter 3 begins with Color and Temperature and ends with Observed Spectra.
Chapter 4 begins with Color-color Diagrams and ends with Colors of Other Objects.
Chapter 5 begins with Colors of Other Objects and ends with Your Results.
If you would like to use a shorter version of the project with your class, you may
stop after one of the chapters. For example, if you want your students to learn how
astronomers define color, without learning the cause of stellar color, you may
stop after Chapter 2.
If your students are not comfortable using logarithms, you may skip the "Color and
Amounts of Light" section in Chapter 2. The shorter Chapter 2 should take about 1 hour.
The Research Challenge, on the Colors in Astronomy Research page,
should not be done in the classroom for credit. It is designed to be a completely
open-ended and independent scientific investigation, and it should take many hours to
complete. You may wish to give extra credit for completing it. Invite students to discuss
their research questions and approaches with you. When students finish Exercise 13 on
their own, encourage them to E-mail their
results to us. We will look at all the results we receive, and we will put
them best of them up on the project web site.
Questions and Exercises
Questions are designed to get students thinking about the reasoning scientists
use in their work. Exercises come in two types: Practice and Explore. Practice
exercises let students practice using the concepts introduced in the project.
Explore exercises are designed to get students to explore SkyServer data to
discover concepts on their own. For answers to all Questions and Practice
exercises, and sample responses to all Explore exercises,
email us at helpdesk@sdss.org.
Students should be evaluated based on their written answers to the questions and exercises. You may use our sample scoring rubric or develop your own.
If you use our scoring rubric, print out a copy for each student and attach
it when you return his or her work.
For specific information on any part of the project, click Next.
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