Electromagnetic Spectrum
Electromagnetic Spectrum
www.nasa.gov
ELECTROMAGNETIC
SPECTRUM
TOUR OF THE
Introduction to the Electromagnetic Spectrum Anatomy of an Electromagnetic Wave Wave Behaviors Visualization: From Energy to Image
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Radio Waves 10
Microwaves 12
Infrared Waves 14
Reflected Near Infrared Waves 16
Visible Light 18
Ultraviolet Waves 20
X-Rays 22
Gamma Rays 24
The Earths Radiation Budget 26
Credits 28
ELECTROMAGNETIC
SPECTRUM
When you tune your radio, watch TV, send a text message, or pop popcorn in a microwave oven, you are using electromagnetic energy. You depend on this energy every hour of every day. Without it, the world you know could not exist. Electromagnetic energy travels in waves and spans a broad spectrum from very long radio waves to very short gamma rays. The human eye can only detect only a small portion of this spectrum called visible light. A radio detects a different portion of the spectrum, and an x-ray machine uses yet another portion. NASAs scientific instruments use the full range of the electromagnetic spectrum to study the Earth, the solar system, and the universe beyond.
INTRODUCTION TO THE
RHESSI
ATMOSPHERIC WINDOWS
Electromagnetic radiation is reflected or absorbed mainly by several gases in the Earths atmosphere, among the most important being water vapor, carbon dioxide, and ozone. Some radiation, such as visible light, largely passes (is transmitted) through the atmosphere. These regions of the spectrum with wavelengths that can pass through the atmosphere are referred to as atmospheric windows. Some microwaves can even pass through clouds, which make them the best wavelength for transmitting satellite communication signals. While our atmosphere is essential to protecting life on Earth and keeping the planet habitable, it is not very helpful when it comes to studying sources of high-energy radiation in space. Instruments have to be positioned above Earths energy-absorbing atmosphere to see higher energy and even some lower energy light sources such as quasars.
ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVE
Energy, a measure of the ability to do work, comes in many forms and can transform from one type to another. Examples of stored or potential energy include batteries and water behind a dam. Objects in motion are examples of kinetic energy. Charged particlessuch as electrons and protonscreate electromagnetic fields when they move, and these fields transport the type of energy we call electromagnetic radiation, or light. Electromagnetic Waves
Electromagnetic waves are formed by the vibrations of electric and magnetic fields. These fields are perpendicular to one another in the direction the wave is traveling. Once formed, this energy travels at the speed of light until further interaction with matter.
ANATOMY OF AN
ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
Electricity can be static, like the energy that can make your hair stand on end. Magnetism can also be static, as it is in a refrigerator magnet. A changing magnetic field will induce a changing electric field and vice-versathe two are linked. These changing fields form electromagnetic waves. Electromagnetic waves differ from mechanical waves in that they do not require a medium to propagate. This means that electromagnetic waves can travel not only through air and solid materials, but also through the vacuum of space.
POLARIZATION
One of the physical properties of light is that it can be polarized. Polarization is a measurement of the electromagnetic fields alignment. In the figure above, the electric field (in red) is vertically polarized. Think of a throwing a Frisbee at a picket fence. In one orientation it will pass through, in another it will be rejected. This is similar to how sunglasses are able to eliminate glare by absorbing the polarized portion of the light.
is called a Hertz (Hz), after Heinrich Hertz who established the existence of radio waves. A wave with two cycles that pass a point in one second has a frequency of 2 Hz.
WAVELENGTH
Electromagnetic waves have crests and troughs similar to those of ocean waves. The distance between crests is the wavelength. The shortest wavelengths are just fractions of the size of an atom, while the longest wavelengths scientists currently study can be larger than the diameter of our planet!
ENERGY
An electromagnetic wave can also be described in terms of its energyin units of measure called electron volts (eV). An electron volt is the amount of kinetic energy needed to move an electron through one volt potential. Moving along the spectrum from long to short wavelengths, energy increases as the wavelength shortens. Consider a jump rope with its ends being pulled up and down. More energy is needed to make the rope have more waves.
Classical waves transfer energy without transporting matter through the medium. Waves in a pond do not carry the water molecules from place to place; rather the waves energy travels through the water, leaving the water molecules in place, much like a bug bobbing on top of ripples in water.
FREQUENCY
The number of crests that pass a given point within one second is described as the frequency of the wave. One waveor cycleper second
Wave Behaviors
WAVE BEHAVIORS
Light waves across the electromagnetic spectrum behave in similar ways. Light can be transmitted, reflected, absorbed, refracted, polarized, diffracted, and scattered. Specialized instruments onboard NASA spacecraft and airplanes collect data on how waves behave when they interact with matter. Scientists use these data to learn about the physical and chemical composition of the different types of matter. Refraction
Refraction is when light waves change direction as they pass from one medium to another. Light travels slower in air than in a vacuum, and even slower in water. As light travels into a different medium, the change in speed bends the light. Different wavelengths of light are slowed at different rates, which causes them to bend at different angles. For example, when the full spectrum of visible light travels through the glass of a prism, the wavelengths are separated into the colors of the rainbow.
When light waves encounter an object, they are either transmitted through, reflected, or absorbed depending on the composition of the object and the wavelength of the light. When incident light (incoming light) hits an object and bounces off, this is an example of reflected energy. Very smooth surfaces such as mirrors reflect almost all incident light. The color of an object is actually the color of the light reflected while all other colors are absorbed. Color, in this case, refers to the different wavelengths of light in the visible light spectrum. Lasers onboard NASAs Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter rely on the reflective property of light waves to map the surface of the Moon. The instrument measures the time it takes a laser pulse to hit the surface and return. The longer the response time, the farther away the surface and lower the elevation. A shorter response time means the surface is closer or higher in elevation. In this image of the Moons southern hemisphere, low elevations are shown as purple and blue, and high elevations are shown in red and brown.
Absorption occurs when photons from incident light hit atoms and molecules and cause them to vibrate. The more an objects molecules move and vibrate, the hotter it becomes. This heat is then emitted from the object as thermal energy. Some objects, such as darker colored objects, absorb more incident light energy than others. For example, black pavement absorbs most visible and UV energy and reflects very little, while a light-colored concrete sidewalk reflects more energy than it absorbs. Thus, the black pavement is hotter than the sidewalk on a hot summer day. Photons bounce around during this absorption process and lose bits of energy to numerous molecules along the way. This thermal energy then radiates in the form of longer wavelength infrared energy. Thermal radiation from the energy-absorbing asphalt and roofs in a city can raise its surface temperature by as much as 10 Celsius. The Landsat 7 satellite image below shows the city of Atlanta as an island of heat compared to the surrounding area. Sometimes this warming of air above cities can influence weather, which is called the urban heat island effect.
Diffraction is the bending and spreading of waves around an obstacle. It is most pronounced when a light wave strikes an object with a size comparable to its own wavelength. An instrument called a spectrometer uses diffraction to separate light into a range of wavelengthsa spectrum. In the case of visible light, the separation of wavelengths through diffraction results in a rainbow. A spectrometer uses diffraction (and the subsequent interference) of light from slits or gratings to separate wavelengths. Faint peaks of energy at specific wavelengths can then be detected and recorded. A graph of these data is called a spectral signature. Patterns in a spectral signature help scientists identify the physical condition and composition of stellar and interstellar matter. The graph below from the SPIRE infrared spectrometer onboard the ESA (European Space Agency) Herschel space telescope reveals strong emission lines from carbon monoxide (CO), atomic carbon, and ionized nitrogen in Galaxy M82.
Scattering occurs when light bounces off an object in a variety of directions. The amount of scattering that takes place depends on the wavelength of the light and the size and structure of the object. The sky appears blue because of this scattering behavior. Light at shorter wavelengthsblue and violetis scattered by nitrogen and oxygen as it passes through the atmosphere. Longer wavelengths of lightred and yellowtransmit through the atmosphere. This scattering of light at shorter wavelengths illuminates the skies with light from the blue and violet end of the visible spectrum. Even though violet is scattered more than blue, the sky looks blue to us because our eyes are more sensitive to blue light. Aerosols in the atmosphere can also scatter light. NASAs Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO) satellite can observe the scattering of laser pulses to see the distributions of aerosols from sources such as dust storms and forest fires. The image below shows a volcanic ash cloud drifting over Europe from an eruption of Icelands Eyjafjallajkull Volcano in 2010.
VISUALIZATION:
MARS ODYSSEY
DIGITAL CAMERA
Digital cameras operate similarly to some scientific instruments. A sensor
in the camera captures the brightness of red, green, and blue light and
records these brightness values as numbers. The three sets of data are
then combined in the red, green, and blue channels of a computer moni
tor to create a color image.
Such composite images allow astronomers to compare how features are seen in multiple wavelengths. Its like seeing with a camera, nightvision goggles, and x-ray vision all at once.
Red
Green
Blue
Spitzer
Hubble
Chandra
Composite
COLOR MAPS
Often a data set, such as elevation or temperature data, is best represented as a range of values. To help scientists visualize the data, the values are mapped to a color scale. The color code is arbitrary and thus can be chosen according to how the data can best be visualized. The sea surface temperature map below uses a scale from dark blue for cold temperatures to red for warm temperatures. Evaporation at the oceans surface leaves minerals and salts behind. For this and other reasons, the salinity of the ocean varies from place to place. This map shows the long-term averages of sea surface salinity using practical salinity unitsunits used to describe the concentration of dissolved salts in water. The white regions have the highest salinity and the dark regions have the lowest.
Red
Green
Blue
Composite
2.1 m
1.8 m
1.0 m
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Radio Waves
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RADIO WAVES
Radio Waves in Space
Astronomical objects that have a changing magnetic field can produce radio waves. NASAs STEREO satellite monitors bursts of radio waves from the Suns corona. Data pictured here show emissions from a variety of sources including radio bursts from the Sun, the Earth, and even Jupiter.
STEREO
RADIO TELESCOPES
Radio telescopes look toward the heavens to view planets, comets, giant clouds of gas and dust, stars, and galaxies. By studying the radio waves originating from these sources, astronomers can learn about their composition, structure, and motion. Radio astronomy has the advantage that sunlight, clouds, and rain do not affect observations. Since radio waves are longer than optical waves, radio telescopes are made differently than the telescopes used for visible light. Radio telescopes must be physically larger than an optical telescopes in order to make images of comparable resolution. But they can be made lighter with millions of small holes cut through the dish since the long radio waves are too big to see them. The Parkes radio telescope, which has a dish 64 meters wide, cannot yield an image any clearer than a small backyard optical telescope!
RADIO EMISSIONS
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Microwaves
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MICROWAVES
MICROWAVE OVENS
Microwave ovens work by using microwaves about 12 centimeters in length to force water and fat molecules in food to rotate. The interaction of these molecules undergoing forced rotation creates heat, and the food is cooked.
This Doppler-radar image seen on TV weather news uses microwaves for local weather forecasting. Shown here is Hurricane Claudettes eye-wall making landfall.
spacecrafts precise altitude and correct for the effect of water vapor on the pulse can determine the sea surface height within just a few centimeters!
AQUA
MICROWAVE BANDS
Microwaves are a portion or band found at the higher frequency end of the radio spectrum, but they are commonly distinguished from radio waves because of the technologies used to access them. Different wavelengths of microwaves (grouped into sub-bands) provide different information to scientists. Medium-length (C-band) microwaves penetrate through clouds, dust, smoke, snow, and rain to reveal the Earths surface. L-band microwaves, like those used by a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver in your car, can also penetrate the canopy cover of forests to measure the soil moisture of rain forests. Most communication satellites use C-, X-, and Ku-bands to send signals to a ground station. Microwaves that penetrate haze, light rain and snow, clouds, and smoke are beneficial for satellite communication and studying the Earth from space. The SeaWinds instrument onboard the Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) satellite uses radar pulses in the Ku-band of the microwave spectrum. This scatterometer measures changes in the energy of the
microwave pulses and can determine speed and direction of wind near the ocean surface. The ability of microwaves to pass through clouds enables scientists to monitor conditions underneath a hurricane.
HURRICANE KATRINA
HURRICANE KATRINA
MICROWAVE BACKGROUND
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Infrared Waves
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INFRARED WAVES
Seeing the Unseen
When we look up at the constellation Orion, we see only the visible light. But NASAs Spitzer space telescope was able to detect nearly 2,300 planet-forming disks in the Orion nebula by sensing the infrared glow of their warm dust. Each disk has the potential to form planets and its own solar system.
INFRARED ENERGY
A remote control uses light waves just beyond the visible spectrum of lightinfrared light wavesto change channels on your TV. This region of the spectrum is divided into near-, mid-, and far-infrared. The region from 8 to 15 microns (m) is referred to by Earth scientists as thermal infrared since these wavelengths are best for studying the longwave thermal energy radiating from our planet.
Thermometers placed within each color of the visible spectrum reveal an increase in temperature from blue to red. The light energy just beyond the visible spectrum, infrared, is even warmer.
DISCOVERY OF INFRARED
In 1800, William Herschel conducted an experiment measuring the difference in temperature between the colors in the visible spectrum. When he noticed an even warmer temperature measurement just beyond the red end of the spectrum, he had discovered infrared light!
COOL ASTRONOMY
Many objects in the universe are too cool and faint to be detected in visible light but can be detected in the infrared. Scientists are beginning to unlock the mysteries of cooler objects across the universe such as planets, cool stars, nebulae, and many more, by studying the infrared waves they emit. The Cassini spacecraft captured this image of Saturns aurora using infrared waves. The aurora is shown in blue, and the underlying clouds are shown in red. These aurorae are unique because they can cover the entire pole, whereas aurorae around Earth and Jupiter are typically confined by magnetic fields to rings surrounding the magnetic poles. The large and variable nature of these aurorae indicates that charged particles streaming in from the Sun are experiencing some type of magnetism above Saturn that was previously unexpected.
THERMAL IMAGING
We can sense some infrared energy as heat. Some objects are so hot they also emit visible lightsuch as a fire does. Other objects, such as humans, are not as hot and only emit only infrared waves. Our eyes cannot see these infrared waves but instruments that can sense infrared energysuch as night-vision goggles or infrared camerasallow us to see the infrared waves emitting from warm objects such as humans and animals. The temperatures for the images below are in degrees Fahrenheit.
THERMAL IMAGING
SATURNS AURORA IN IR
CARINA NEBULA
Visible Light
Infrared
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Near-Infrared Waves
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NEAR-INFRARED WAVES
Helping Farmers
Near-infrared data collected by the Landsat 7 satellite, such as this image of Minnesota, can help farmers assess the health of their crops. Shades of red in this image indicate good crop health, and yellow colors reveal where crops are infested.
REFLECTED
INFRARED FILM
Color Infrared film can record near-infrared energy and can help scientists study plant diseases where there is a change in pigment and cell structure. These two images show the difference between a color infrared photo and a natural color photo of trees in a park.
LANDSAT 7
HEALTHY VEGETATION
Our eyes perceive a leaf as green because wavelengths in the green region of the spectrum are reflected by pigments in the leaf, while the other visible wavelengths are absorbed. In addition, the components in plants reflect, transmit, and absorb different portions of the near-infrared radiation that we cannot see. Reflected near-infrared radiation can be sensed by satellites, allowing scientists to study vegetation from space. Healthy vegetation absorbs blue- and red-light energy to fuel photosynthesis and create chlorophyll. A plant with more chlorophyll will reflect more near-infrared energy than an unhealthy plant. Thus, analyzing a plants spectrum of both absorption and reflection in visible and in infrared wavelengths can provide information about the plants health and productivity.
SOIL COMPOSITION
Infrared Film Color Film
PLANETS IN NEAR-INFRARED
This false-color composite of Jupiter combines near-infrared and visiblelight data of sunlight reflected from Jupiters clouds. Since methane gas in Jupiters atmosphere limits the penetration of sunlight, the amount of reflected near-infrared energy varies depending on the clouds altitude. The resulting composite image shows this altitude difference as different colors. Yellow colors indicate high clouds; red colors are lower clouds; and blue colors show even lower clouds in Jupiters atmosphere. The Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) onboard NASAs Hubble Space Telescope captured this image at the time of a rare alignment of three of Jupiters largest moonsIo, Ganymede, and Callistoacross the planets face.
Near-infrared data can also help identify types of rock and soil. This image of the Saline Valley area in California was acquired by the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) onboard NASAs Terra satellite. Data from ASTERs visible and near-infrared bands at 0.81 m, 0.56 m, and .66 m are composited in red, green, and blue creating the falsecolor image below. Vegetation appears red, snow and dry salt lakes are white, and exposed rocks are brown, gray, yellow, and blue. Rock colors mainly reflect the presence of iron minerals and variations in albedo (solar energy reflected off the surface).
JUPITER IN NEAR IR
HEALTHY LEAF
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Visible Light
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VISIBLE LIGHT
Victoria Crater on Mars
The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment
(HiRISE) camera onboard the Mars Reconnaissance
Orbiter (MRO) captured this spectacular visible light
image of Victoria Crater.
Isaac Newtons experiment in 1665 showed that a prism bends visible light and that each color refracts at a slightly different angle depending on the wavelength of the color.
moon. The tapered patternscoronal streamersaround the Sun are formed by the outward flow of plasma that is shaped by magnetic field lines extending millions of miles into space.
TEMPERATURE OF STARS
SPECTRAL SIGNATURES OF
EARTH FEATURES
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Ultraviolet Waves
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ULTRAVIOLET WAVES
Solar Prominence
Johann Ritters experiment was designed to expose photographic paper to light just beyond the visible spectrum and prove the existence of light beyond violet ultraviolet light.
NASAs Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) spacecraft captured this view of a dense loop of plasma erupting on the Suns surfacea solar prominence. The plasma is seen flowing along a magnetic field
DISCOVERY OF ULTRAVIOLET
In 1801, Johann Ritter conducted an experiment to investigate the existence of energy beyond the violet end of the visible spectrum. Knowing that photographic paper would turn black more rapidly in blue light than in red light, he exposed the paper to light beyond violet. Sure enough, the paper turned black, proving the existence of ultraviolet light.
AURORAE
Aurorae are caused by high-energy waves that travel along a planets magnetic poles, where they excite atmospheric gases and cause them to glow. Photons in this high-energy radiation bump into atoms of gases in the atmosphere causing electrons in the atoms to excite, or move to the atoms upper shells. When the electrons move back down to a lower shell, the energy is released as light, and the atom returns to a relaxed state. The color of this light can reveal what type of atom was excited. Green light indicates oxygen at lower altitudes. Red light can be from oxygen molecules at a higher altitude or from nitrogen. On Earth, aurorae around the north pole are called the Northern Lights.
ULTRAVIOLET ASTRONOMY
Since the Earths atmosphere absorbs much of the high-energy ultraviolet radiation, scientists use data from satellites positioned above the atmosphere, in orbit around the Earth, to sense UV radiation coming from our Sun and other astronomical objects. Scientists can study the formation of stars in ultraviolet since young stars shine most of their light at these wavelengths. This image from NASAs Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) spacecraft reveals new young stars in the spiral arms of galaxy M81.
JUPITERS AURORA
The Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of Jupiters aurora in ultraviolet wrapping around Jupiters north pole like a lasso.
OUR SUN IN UV
GALAXY M81 IN UV
JUPITERS AURORA IN UV
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X-Rays
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X-RAYS
CHANDRA
DISCOVERY OF X-RAYS
X-rays were first observed and documented in 1895 by German scientist Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen. He discovered that firing streams of x-rays through arms and hands created detailed images of the bones inside. When you get an x-ray taken, x-ray sensitive film is put on one side of your body, and x-rays are shot through you. Because bones are dense and absorb more x-rays than skin does, shadows of the bones are left on the x-ray film while the skin appears transparent. Our Suns radiation peaks in the visual range, but the Suns corona is much hotter and radiates mostly x-rays. To study the corona, scientists use data collected by x-ray detectors on satellites in orbit around the Earth. Japans Hinode spacecraft produced these x-ray images of the Sun that allow scientists to see and record the energy flows within the corona.
SUPERNOVA
Since Earths atmosphere blocks x-ray radiation, telescopes with x-ray detectors must be positioned above Earths absorbing atmosphere. The supernova remnant Cassiopeia A (Cas A) was imaged by three of NASAs great observatories, and data from all three observatories were used to create the image shown below. Infrared data from the Spitzer Space Telescope are colored red, optical data from the Hubble Space Telescope are yellow, and x-ray data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory are green and blue. The x-ray data reveal hot gases at about ten million degrees Celsius that were created when ejected material from the supernova smashed into surrounding gas and dust at speeds of about ten million miles per hour. By comparing infrared and x-ray images, astronomers are learning more about how relatively cool dust grains can coexist within the super-hot, x-ray producing gas.
SUPERNOVA CAS A
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Gamma Rays
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GAMMA RAYS
Brighter colors in the Cygus region indicate greater numbers of gamma rays detected by the Fermi gamma-ray space telescope.
FERMI
COMPOSITION OF PLANETS
Scientists can use gamma rays to determine the elements on other planets. The Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) Gamma-Ray Spectrometer (GRS) can measure gamma rays emitted by the nuclei of atoms on planet Mercurys surface that are struck by cosmic rays. When struck by cosmic rays, chemical elements in soils and rocks emit uniquely identifiable signatures of energy in the form of gamma rays. These data can help scientists look for geologically important elements such as hydrogen, magnesium, silicon, oxygen, iron, titanium, sodium, and calcium. The gamma-ray spectrometer on NASAs Mars Odyssey Orbiter detects and maps these signatures, such as this map (below) showing hydrogen concentrations of Martian surface soils.
A FULL-SPECTRUM IMAGE
The composite image below of the Cas A supernova remnant shows the full spectrum in one image. Gamma rays from Fermi are shown in magenta; x-rays from the Chandra Observatory are blue and green. The visible light data captured by the Hubble space telescope are displayed in yellow. Infrared data from the Spitzer space telescope are shown in red; and radio data from the Very Large Array are displayed in orange.
COMPTON SCATTERING
HYDROGEN ON MARS
SUPERNOVA
Gamma Ray
Visible and UV
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RADIATION BUDGET
The energy entering, reflected, absorbed, and emitted by the Earth system are the components of the Earths radiation budget. Based on the physics principle of conservation of energy, this radiation budget represents the accounting of the balance between incoming radiation, which is almost entirely solar radiation, and outgoing radiation, which is partly reflected solar radiation and partly radiation emitted from the Earth system, including the atmosphere. A budget thats out of balance can cause the temperature of the atmosphere to increase or decrease and eventually affect our climate. The units of energy employed in measuring this incoming and outgoing radiation are watts per square meter (W/m2).
THE EARTHS
Incoming Shortwave
Radiation
TERRA
Absorbed by Atmosphere
Atmospheric Window
GREENHOUSE EFFECT
Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere (such as water vapor and carbon dioxide) absorb most of the Earths emitted longwave infrared radiation, which heats the lower atmosphere. In turn, the warmed atmosphere emits longwave radiation, some of which radiates toward the Earths surface, keeping our planet warm and generally comfortable. Increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane increase the temperature of the lower atmosphere by restricting the outward passage of emitted radiation, resulting in global warming, or, more broadly, global climate change.
Reflected by Surface
ABSORBED ENERGY
The solar radiation that passes through Earths atmosphere is either reflected off snow, ice, or other surfaces or is absorbed by the Earths surface.
Absorbed Energy
Emitted Surface
Radiation
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Credits
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CREDITS
BOOK CREDITS
Author: Ginger Butcher Design and illustration: Jenny Mottar Copyediting: C. Claire Smith Special Thanks to NASA Science Mission Directorate and Ruth Netting Created under the HITSS contract to NASA Headquarters by InDyne, Inc. and V! Studios, Inc. Key Science Advisors and Editors: Dr. Claire L. Parkinson, Dr. Edward J. Wollack Reviewers: Jeannette E. Allen, Max Bernstein, Dr. Marcianna P. Delaney, Britt Griswold, Dr. Hashima Hasan, Dr. J. E. Hayes, Dr. Paul Hertz, Dr. Lisa Wainio, and Greg Williams Additional Thanks to: Dr. Eric Brown de Colstoun, Scott Gries, Dr. David Lindley, Dr. Christopher A. Shuman, Todd E. Toth, and George Varros
Discipline Units
10 kHz
Alternate Unit
30 kilometer 3.0 kilometer 0.3 kilometer 30 centimeter 21 centimeter 1.0 millimeter 100 micrometer 50 micrometer 20 micrometer 1.0 micrometer 500 nanometer 100 nanometer 50 nanometer 10 nanometer 12 Angstrom 1.2 Angstrom 0.12 Angstrom 1200 femtometer 1.2 femtometer
Length (meters)
30000 3000 300 0.3 0.21 0.001 0.0001 0.00005 0.00002 0.000001 0.0000005 0.0000001 0.00000005 0.00000001 0.0000000012 0.00000000012 0.000000000012 0.0000000000012 0.0000000000000012
Size Comparison
IMAGE CREDITS
Inside Cover: Waves, Flavio Takemoto; Page 2-3: Communication Tower, Mihai Andoni; Radio, Peter Huys; Microwave Oven, Kriss Szkurlatowski; Remote Control, Bartek Ambrozik; Eye, Flavio Takemoto; Page4: Waves black background, Jana Kollarova; Waterdrop, iStock Photo; Page 6: Topography of the Moon, NASA/Goddard; Atlanta in Infrared, NASA images by Marit Jentoft-Nilsen, based on Landsat-7 data; Ice background, Elisabeth Sophia Fuchs; Page 7: Spectrograph of Galaxy 3C 326, Troy Benesch; Volcanic Ash Distribution, NASA/ GSFC/LaRC/JPL, MISR Team; Page 8: Balloon Photo, iStock Photo; Saturn Visible Light, NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA) Acknowledgment: R.G. French (Wellesley College), J. Cuzzi (NASA/Ames), L. Dones (SwRI), and J. Lissauer (NASA/Ames); Saturn False Color, NASA/JPL/STScI; Page 9: Messier 101 Galaxy, NASA, ESA, CXC, JPL, Caltech and STScI; Sea Surface Temperature and Sea Surface Salinity, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio; Page 10: Karl Janskys Radio Telescope, Image courtesy of NRAO/AUI; Solar Radio Bursts, NASA/GSFC Wind/Wave, Michael L. Kaiser; Parkes Radio Telescope, Ian Sutton; Page 11: Radio Emission Near Black Hole, VLA & NRAO, Farhad YusefZedeh et al. Northwestern; Quasar in Radio & Infrared, NASA/JPL-Caltech/A. Martinez-Sansigre (Oxford University); Page 12: Hurricane Katrina Sea Winds, NASA image courtesy the QuikSCAT Science Team at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory; Doppler Radar, NOAA; Sea Surface Height, NASA/JPL Ocean Surface Topography Team; Page 13: Arctic Sea Ice from AMSR-E, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio; Sea Surface Height, NASA/JPL Ocean Surface Topography Team; WMAP Microwave Background, NASA/ WMAP Science Team; Page 14: Thermal Imaging, Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech; Hershels Experiment, Troy Benesch; Saturns Aurora in IR, Cassini VIMS Team, JPL, ESA, NASA; Page 15: Spitzer image of Orion in Infrared & James Web Telescope, Thomas Megeath (Univ. Toledo) et al., JPL, Caltech, NASA; Carina Nebula, NASA, ESA, and the Hubble SM4 ERO Team; Forest Fires in Northern California, NASA image by Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team; Page 16: E. coli, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, NIAID, NIH; Healthy Leaf, Jeff Carns; Infrared and Natural Color Film photos, Ginger Butcher; Page 17: Minnesota Crops, NASA image created by Jesse Allen, using Landsat data provided by the United States Geological Survey; Saline Valley California, NASA, GSFC, MITI, ERSDAC, JAROS, and the U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team; Jupiter in Near Infrared, NASA and E. Karkoschka (University of Arizona); Page 18: Soap bubble, iStock; Suns Corona, Courtesy of Miloslav Druckmller, Martin Dietzel, Peter Aniol, Vojtech Ruin; Sun Image, Courtesy of SOHO/[instrument] consortium. SOHO is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA; Prism Image, Troy Benesch; Page 19: Victoria Crater on Mars, NASA/JPL/University of Arizona; Antarctic Ice Streams, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center; Page 20: Rhinovirus, iStock; Ultraviolet waves, NASA/SDO/AIA; Our Sun in UV, NASA/Goddard/SDO AIA Team; Galaxy M81 in UV, NASA/ JPL-Caltech; Ritters Experiment, Troy Benesch; Page 21: Solar Prominence, NASA image and animation from the Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio and the Solar Dynamics Observatory; Mapping the Moon in UV, Ernest Wright, LRO LAMP; Ozone Hole, NASA; Jupiters Aurora in UV, John Clarke (University of Michigan) and NASA; Page 22: Our Sun in X-Ray, Hinode JAXA/NASA/PPARC; Mars Rover, Jeff Carns; Page 23: Galactic Center, NASA/UMass/D.Wang et al.; Sun images from SOHOEIT Consortium: NASA/ ESA; Supernova, NASA/CXC/SAO; Optical: NASA/STScI; Infrared: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Steward/O.Krause et al.; Earths X-Ray Aurora, POLAR, PIXIE, NASA; Page 24: Gamma Ray Burst, NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler, et al.; Page 25: Fermi Gamma Ray Sky and Fermi spacecraft, NASA/DOE/International LAT Team; Hydrogen on Mars, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio; Supernova, NASA/DOE/Fermi LAT Collaboration, CXC/SAO/JPL-Caltech/Steward/O. Krause et al., and NRAO/AUI; Back Cover: Waves, Flavio Takemoto
100 kHz 1 MHz 1 GHz 1.4 GHz 1000 micrometer 100 micrometer 50 micrometer 20 micrometer 1.0 micrometer 5000 Angstrom 1000 Angstrom 500 Angstrom 100 Angstrom 1 kev 10 kev 100 kev 1 Mev 1 Gev
Key Science Advisors and Editors: Dr. Claire Parkinson, Dr. Edward J. Wollack Special Thanks to Ruth Netting Additional Thanks to: Dr. Denis Bogan, Dr. Eric Brown de Colstoun, Anita Davis, Dr. Marcianna P. Delaney, Dr. James Irons, Bela Kekesi, John Keller, Dr. Anita Krishnamurthi, Elaine Lewis, Dr. David Lindley, Dr. James Lochner, Lou Mayo, Jeffrey Morisette, Carolyn Ng
Diameter of an atom
Diameter/nucleus
FRONT COVER
Cover image shows the Chandra Spacecraft, the Ozone hole image by Auras OMI instrument, the Blue Marble image of Earth from Terras MODIS instrument, and pictured left to right Arno Penzias, Wilhelm Roentgen and Issac Newton.
Winner
AWARDS
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BACK COVER
Missions and instruments mentioned in the text are displayed in this chart.
NP-2010-07-664-HQ