Publisher’s version / Version de l'éditeur:
Skygazing: Astronomy through the seasons, 2018-09-11
READ THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS CAREFULLY BEFORE USING THIS WEBSITE. https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/copyright
Vous avez des questions? Nous pouvons vous aider. Pour communiquer directement avec un auteur, consultez la
première page de la revue dans laquelle son article a été publié afin de trouver ses coordonnées. Si vous n’arrivez pas à les repérer, communiquez avec nous à [email protected].
Questions? Contact the NRC Publications Archive team at
[email protected]. If you wish to email the authors directly, please see the first page of the publication for their contact information.
NRC Publications Archive
Archives des publications du CNRC
This publication could be one of several versions: author’s original, accepted manuscript or the publisher’s version. / La version de cette publication peut être l’une des suivantes : la version prépublication de l’auteur, la version acceptée du manuscrit ou la version de l’éditeur.
For the publisher’s version, please access the DOI link below./ Pour consulter la version de l’éditeur, utilisez le lien DOI ci-dessous.
https://doi.org/10.4224/23004084
Access and use of this website and the material on it are subject to the Terms and Conditions set forth at
The expanding universe
Tapping, Ken
https://publications-cnrc.canada.ca/fra/droits
L’accès à ce site Web et l’utilisation de son contenu sont assujettis aux conditions présentées dans le site LISEZ CES CONDITIONS ATTENTIVEMENT AVANT D’UTILISER CE SITE WEB.
NRC Publications Record / Notice d'Archives des publications de CNRC:
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/object/?id=420a20e8-a2ec-4f99-9c9e-1dc06b9e6f9b https://publications-cnrc.canada.ca/fra/voir/objet/?id=420a20e8-a2ec-4f99-9c9e-1dc06b9e6f9b
THE EXPANDING UNIVERSE
Ken Tapping, 11thSeptember, 2018The universe is expanding. It started to expand at the Big Bang, almost 14 billion years ago. We know how fast it is expanding and that it is accelerating. We owe our knowledge to three instruments: The first is the telescope. Distant objects can be extremely faint, and the biggest possible light collector is needed to catch enough light to make an image or to analyze. For example the 3.6m diameter mirror in the Canada France Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), which is now by no means the largest telescope in the world, collects more than 50 million times as much light as our unaided eyes. In addition to making images, the light collected by the telescope can be fed to two devices. One is the photometer, a device for measuring precisely the apparent brightness of cosmic objects. The other is the spectrometer, which is used to measure the composition of the light. In addition, the universe is so big that looking further and further away is looking further and further back in time. If we look at an object a billion light years away, we see it as it was a billion years ago, when its light started on its way to us. By looking at more and more distant objects we can read the history of the universe, providing we know how far away the objects are. Then, to study the expansion of the universe we need to be able to know how fast objects are receding from us. To find distances we measure the apparent brightnesses of objects. If we know their energy output – their luminosity -- we can then calculate how far away they are. If you know that distant point of light is a 100W bulb, you can measure its apparent brightness and then estimate its
distance. For nearby galaxies there are stars such as Cepheids and RR-Lyrae variables, which cycle in brightness in a manner related to their
luminosity. For more remote objects our main yardstick is a type of exploding star. The
explosions are produced by a kind of binary star, where one of the pair is a white dwarf, an Earth-sized relic with no fuel left, still very hot but very slowly cooling off. It pulls material off its partner,
which accumulates on its surface. When a critical amount has been collected, a runaway fusion reaction takes place, like a supersized hydrogen bomb. Because the explosion happens when a critical amount has been collected, we can estimate the energy output. When one of these explosions occurs in a distant galaxy, we measure how bright it looks, which gives us its distance. The last tool in our analysis of the universe’s expansion is the Doppler effect. We’ve all heard it. For example, when a noisy motorcycle passes by, or we watch a train passing us at a level crossing, the sound has a higher pitch when the source is approaching, and a lower tone when it is receding. The same applies to light. If the source is
approaching us, its light is shifted to the blue; if it is moving away, its light is reddened, or redshifted. All the elements have unique multicolour
signatures, or spectra. For example, in the laboratory we can measure the spectrum of hydrogen, a common element in the universe. Then we search for the spectral signature of hydrogen in distant, cosmic objects. By comparing the two spectra we can determine how much the cosmic spectrum is red-shifted, which tells us how fast the object is receding. If we have the distance and the redshift for an object, and noting that distance is linked to time, we know the speed the universe was expanding at that point in the past. By measuring the redshift of objects at different distances, we can measure how fast the universe is expanding at different points in its history. We would expect the expansion after the initial Big Bang to be slowing down. Instead, surprisingly, it is speeding up. We cannot yet explain this. During the evening Mars, red planet is
conspicuous low in the southeast. Saturn is low the South and Jupiter very low in the Southwest. The Moon will reach First Quarter on the 16th.
Ken Tapping is an astronomer with the National Research Council's Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory, Penticton, BC, V2A 6J9.
Tel (250) 497-2300, Fax (250) 497-2355 E-mail: [email protected]