The Hubble Diagram Project
This project takes students through the evidence that the universe is expanding. The
discovery of the expanding universe was one of the greatest revelations of 20th Century
astronomy. They will make a "Hubble diagram," named for the astronomer who first made
one, for galaxies from the SkyServer database.
If you are short on time, you can do a shorter version of the project
consisting of the Introduction and Simple Diagram sections, up to and
including Exercise 4.
The student project's Introduction and Conclusion give some information on how the
expanding universe was discovered, and what logical steps lead from the Hubble diagram's
straight line to the expanding universe concept. For more information on the expanding
universe, its discovery, and the big bang theory, read the
About Astronomy: Expanding
Universe section of SkyServer, or look up one of the following
references:
Hartmann, William K., Astronomy: the Cosmic Journey, Wadsworth, 1989
Sagan, Carl, Cosmos, Random House, 1983
Project Goals
By the end of the project, students should be able to:
Describe what scientists mean by an "expanding
universe" in their own words
Explain how the Hubble diagram supports the idea
of an expanding universe
Understand how theory and experiment come
together to create scientific evidence
Explain what the big bang is, and how it relates
to the expanding universe
Look up data using several interfaces
Understand the relationship between magnitude,
brightness, and distance in astronomy
Explain the concept of redshift, and give
examples
Make a simple x-y graph
Understand the concept of statistical fit
Find relative distances to galaxies using algebra
Understand the advantages and disadvantages of
various methods for finding relative distances in astronomy
Identify galaxies and galaxy clusters in images,
and determine which galaxies are members of which clusters
Judge the precision and accuracy of scientific data
Identify emission and absorption lines in spectra
Understand the two interpretations of redshift,
and when it is appropriate to use either
Use spectral templates to find the redshifts of
unknown spectra
Understand Hubble's Law, c z = H0 d
Calculate the age of the universe
Use deductive logic to analyze arguments
Background Knowledge
To begin this project, students should have a basic
familiarity with astronomical ideas. They should know what galaxies and
galaxy clusters are. They should know that light is composed of waves with
definite wavelengths and frequencies. They should have some experience
with scientific reasoning. They should have completed Algebra I. Exercises
8 and 9 require trigonometric functions and the small angle approximation
(when x << 1, tan x =
x). If your students have not had
trigonometry, you may skip these Exercises and complete the rest of the
project.
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 first page is an Introduction. It tells students the history of how astronomers
in the early 1900s discovered that the universe was expanding.
After the Introduction, the project is divided into four parts. In the first
part, students make a simple Hubble diagram from pre-selected data. They read
through background material that explains how astronomers use magnitude and
redshift. Then, they look up six galaxies in the SDSS data, finding their
magnitudes and redshifts.
Part I should take about 2 hours to finish. For a short version of the project that
introduces students to the idea that the universe is expanding, and to the
evidence astronomers use to prove the expansion, use only the Introduction and Exercises 1-4.
The second half of Part I, Exercises 5-6, is intended as a "teaser" - students discover
that proving the universe is expanding is not as easy as Exercises 1-4 made it seem. The
galaxies in Exercises 5-6 were chosen to give Hubble diagrams with widely scattered
data.
In the second part, students learn how to turn their direct measurements of galaxy
properties into actual measurements of relative distances. Then, they learn how astronomers
deal with a fundamental confusion: if a galaxy looks large and bright, does that really
mean it is close to us? Or, could it actually be large and bright, but farther
away? Students study clusters of galaxies to determine which galaxies are members of
the same cluster. Lastly, they examine three clusters in the same area of space, and
find the relative distances to galaxies in each cluster.
Part II should take about 8 hours to finish.
Part III tells students how astronomers calculate redshift. In Part I, students simply
looked up redshifts from the Skyserver data; in Part III, they will calculate redshifts
themselves, the same way astronomers do.
Part III should take about 6 hours to complete. Skip part III if you
would rather have students look up the redshifts on the spectra to save time.
Part IV brings together the conclusions from Parts II and III to make a new, better
Hubble diagram. Students learn how the Hubble diagram implies that the universe began
with the big bang, then make their own Hubble diagrams. Be sure to emphasize what an
important result this is. The students repeated almost exactly the process that made Hubble
famous - he nearly won the Nobel Prize for doing what they did.
Part IV should take about 3 hours to complete. The last exercise, Exercise 21, is the
final challenge for this project. Exercise 21 should not be done in the classroom
for credit. It is designed to be completely open-ended, and to take many hours to complete.
You may wish to give extra credit for completing it. When students finish Exercise 21 on
their own, encourage them to E-mail their
diagrams to us so we can put them up on the project web site.
Questions and Exercises
Questions are designed to get students thinking about the way scientists work. Exercises
are designed to get students to explore how the SkyServer data suggests that the universe
is expanding. For answers to all questions,
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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