Radio Astronomy - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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equivalent to the apparent angular dimensions of a basketball at the distance of the moon.
In 1984, the U.S.
government appropriated funds for the construction of aninstallation called the very long baseline array (VLBA), a network of 10 radio antennas spread from the U.S.-Canadian border to Puerto Rico and from Hawaii to the U.S.Atlantic coast.
The VLBA is expected to provide angular resolutions in the range of 200-millionths of an arc second.
Canada and Australia are both planning similarprograms.
IV CLASSES OF RADIO SOURCES
Many discrete radio sources have been discovered and studied in our solar system, in our galaxy, and in the wide extent of the universe beyond our galaxy.
A Solar System Radio Astronomy
The sun is the brightest radio source in the sky.
Its radio emission is much more intense than would be expected from the thermal emission of its visible surface, whichhas a temperature near 6000 K (about 10,300° F).
This is because most of the radio emission observed at longer radio wavelengths comes from the much hotter, butoptically invisible, outer atmosphere, which has temperatures near 1,000,000 K (near 1,800,000° F).
In addition to the thermal emission, numerous nonthermal stormsand bursts occur, particularly during periods of high sunspot activity when the intensity of radio emission may dramatically increase by a factor of 1 million or more forbrief periods of about an hour.
The only other source of natural nonthermal radio emission in the solar system is the planet Jupiter.
At wavelengths near 15 m (about 49 ft), Jupiter emits strong burstsof radiation that come from relatively small regions, near the cloud surface, that rotate with the planet.
The intensity of these bursts appears to be greatly influenced bythe location of the satellite Io.
In addition, Jupiter is surrounded by extensive radiation belts that radiate in the microwave band at wavelengths that are shorter thanabout 1 m (about 3.3 ft).
Thermal radiation has been observed to emanate from the surface or atmosphere of all of the planets except Pluto.
These emissions have been used by instrumentsaboard spacecraft to derive information on planetary meteorological conditions and other phenomena.
B Galactic Radio Sources
The Galaxy, or the Milky Way, emits radio waves as a result of synchrotron radiation from cosmic ray electrons moving through the weak galactic magnetic field.
The21-cm line emission from neutral hydrogen is also observed throughout the Galaxy.
Small changes in the observed wavelength of the 21-cm line are caused by themotion of the hydrogen clouds toward or away from an observer.
These changes are an example of the phenomenon known as the Doppler effect, or redshift.
Cloudsthat are most distant from the center of the Galaxy revolve around the center with the greatest velocity, and observations of the Doppler effect are used to measurethe velocity and locate the position of hydrogen clouds.
In this way it has been possible to trace the shapes of the Milky Way’s spiral arms, which are not readilyobserved at optical wavelengths.
In addition to the diffuse background radiation, numerous discrete sources of radio emission exist in the Galaxy.
These discrete sources include the following: supernovaremnants, radio stars, emission nebulas, molecular clouds, and pulsars.
Supernova remnants are the clouds of debris remaining from stars that have exploded ( see Supernova).
Relativistic electrons produced in a supernova explosion are captured by the magnetic field surrounding the site of the explosion.
As these electrons spiral around the magnetic field lines, they continue to radiate for thousands ofyears.
In some cases the star itself continues to be a source of radio emission and is referred to as a radio star.
Another important class of radio star comprises thebinary (double) star systems that emit radio waves when mass is transferred from one component to the other.
Radio stars are often X-ray sources as well.
Thermal radio emission is observed from clouds of ionized hydrogen (termed H II regions) located along the spiral arms of the Galaxy.
When free electrons recombinewith ions of hydrogen or other light elements, radio energy is released that can be observed as recombination lines in the radio portion of the spectrum.
Spectral lines also result from vibrational and rotational transitions of such interstellar molecules as water vapor (H 2O), ammonia (NH3), formaldehyde (H 2CO), and carbon monoxide (CO).
More than 50 interstellar molecules are now known, including many complex and organic molecules.
In some interstellar clouds, the radiomolecular lines are unusually intense due to the maser (microwave amplification by the stimulated emission of radiation) effect ( see Laser; Maser).
The intensity of most cosmic radio sources is steady, or only varies slowly with time.
The pulsars, however, emit short periodic bursts or pulses of radiation about onceper second.
Although first discovered because of their intense pulsed radio emission, some were later found to emit optical and X-ray pulses as well.
Pulsars are thoughtto form when stars like the sun collapse under their own gravity to dimensions of about 10 km (about 6 mi).
The density then becomes extremely great, and electronsare stripped from their atoms, leaving a so-called neutron star.
C Radio Galaxies
Most galaxies probably emit radio waves and do so at energies comparable to that of our own galaxy—about 1032 W.
In the cases of the so-called radio galaxies,however, the radio emission is up to 100 million times stronger.
Most of this energy originates not in the galaxies themselves but in clouds of superheated, ionizedgases, or plasma, located hundreds of thousands or even millions of light-years away from the parent galaxy.
These giant radio clouds may be 100 times the size of thegalaxy itself and are among the largest known objects in the universe.
A great deal of energy is required to generate the powerful radio emissions from radio galaxies, and it may amount to a significant fraction of the total energy thatwould result from the nuclear burning of a whole galaxy.
The origin of this energy and the manner in which it is converted to radio emissions have been major problemsof astrophysics since the discovery of radio galaxies more than two decades ago.
Recent detailed pictures of radio galaxies, obtained with high resolution radio telescopes such as the VLA, often show a prominent jet of material connecting a bright,compact radio source at the galactic nucleus to the more extended radio lobes (clouds).
It is widely speculated that these jets or beams transport energy away from thegalactic nucleus to the radio-emitting plasma and that the source of energy lies in a massive object, possibly a black hole located at the galactic center.
Frequently, acompact radio source is found at the center of radio galaxies.
In one unusual radio galaxy observed in the mid-1980s, two bright clusters of stars near its center areemitting jets apparently braided together.
D Quasars
Quasars ( see Quasar) appear to radiate with the luminosity of hundreds of galaxies, but each quasar is smaller than a typical galaxy by a factor of nearly a million. Quasars have very large redshifts, and they are therefore believed to lie at great distances from the Milky Way.
Because quasars appear to be so powerful, andbecause their radiation often varies rapidly, it was once thought they might be relatively nearby weak objects rather than distant powerful ones.
However, evidence has.
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Liens utiles
- ÉCRITS SUR LA RADIO de Marconi. (résumé)
- RKO (Radio Keith Orpheum).
- RMC (Radio-Monte-Carlo), station de radio généraliste monégasque.
- RADIO-ACTIVITE Connaissances essentielles du cours Découverte par Becquerel en 1896.
- RCA (Radio Corporation of America), groupe multimédia américain, l'un des dix premiers du monde par le chiffre d'affaires.