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  • Have you ever wondered how all the chemical elements are made? Then join me

  • as we are lifting all the star dust secrets to understand the cosmic origin of the

  • chemical element. Let's talk about spectroscopy. This is the technique we

  • use to observe stars in order to figure out their chemical composition.

  • Now, you've probably all seen a rainbow. I really hope you have and what happens in

  • rainbow. Well, white light comes through a little water droplet and it gets split

  • up into the rainbow colors and we do the same thing with a spectrograph mounted

  • at a telescope. We take the star light and we split it up into its rainbow colors.

  • Now, what we see when we do this is not just the rainbow. Actually, we

  • see less than the rainbow because there are certain colors of the rainbow

  • missing. So if I draw this schematically here I have a rainbow, and let's say I

  • have blue here, and then green and yellow, what I will see also is that there is a

  • big line, something like this, missing here and it's black, and then there will be a

  • few things here and a couple there, and you know, many really really thin ones in

  • between that are hard to see. That missing part, or those missing parts here,

  • they contain all the information that we want. It's actually not the colors as

  • such, it's what's missing from there. Now how can we understand that? If we come

  • back to our stars and look at the stellar surface, let's draw a surface layer here,

  • and the core is here, you know that nuclear fusion is going on

  • in the core. It is really hot here and energy comes out of the core in the form

  • of hot photons. So we have these photons escaping from the core and they come and

  • pass through this outer layer here. Of course we are sitting here with

  • our telescope observing the stellar surface, right, as I mentioned in a

  • previous section that we can't look into the core, we can only observe the

  • surface here. And specifically, what we're observing is we're observing all the

  • photons that come off the surface. In this outer layer, we have hydrogen and

  • helium atoms because that's what the star is mostly made of. Hydrogen, helium... but

  • of course there are -- unless we're talking about the very first stars but that's a

  • separate story -- there will be other atoms in here: iron, magnesium, carbon, oxygen, and

  • so what happens is that all elements, hydrogen and helium as well, plus

  • magnesium and so forth, they absorb (let's draw them here), they absorb photons with a

  • very specific energy or wavelengths. That's equivalent. So what comes out

  • of here -- here's one that gets absorbed, all these

  • get absorbed, and then there are some that pass through -- so what we see here is

  • all the ones that came through and of course not the ones that were absorbed

  • by these atoms. So that's exactly what we see here, the colors is

  • everything that came through, and then the black lines here are the ones that are

  • missing. So we can see what's missing. All these iron atoms

  • here, they have absorbed all the photons at a specific color at a specific

  • wavelength and so that's missing. However, it is actually not entirely black-black as

  • only a certain amount is being absorbed, perhaps not completely. So what we

  • can measure is when we take a cross cut through this,

  • we are going to get something that looks like this, and so there is strong

  • absorption here, less absorption here, let's say this is our calcium -- that's a

  • calcium line here -- and these are three magnesium lines, these are two sodium

  • lines, then we can see from these line strengths here what the abundance of the

  • magnesium atoms here, here's another one, is, so line strength here corresponds to

  • abundance of magnesium atoms in the outer atmosphere. The nice thing of

  • course is that we, when we want to find the most metal-poor stars, so the oldest stars,

  • then we want to look for stars whose spectra have very weak lines. Let's say

  • like this because that means that only little calcium, magnesium, and sodium were

  • actually present in the star which means that the star must have

  • formed at a really early time when the cycle of chemical enrichment had only

  • gone around a few times. So this is the secret of spectroscopy, absorption

  • line spectroscopy. We take these kinds of data here and we measure the line strengths,

  • we measure how much is present here, and with the help of computer programs

  • we can and a whole bunch of physics, we can turn these line strengths here into in

  • abundance in the stellar surface, and that tells us about the formation time

  • of these stars.

Have you ever wondered how all the chemical elements are made? Then join me

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