1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:01,020 [MUSIC PLAYING] 2 00:00:01,020 --> 00:00:02,478 ANNA FREBEL: Have you ever wondered 3 00:00:02,478 --> 00:00:06,120 how all the chemical elements are made? 4 00:00:06,120 --> 00:00:08,640 Then join me as we are lifting all these data 5 00:00:08,640 --> 00:00:11,630 secrets to understand the cosmic origin of the chemical 6 00:00:11,630 --> 00:00:12,130 elements. 7 00:00:16,129 --> 00:00:17,480 Let's talk about spectroscopy. 8 00:00:17,480 --> 00:00:20,570 This is the technique we use to observe stars 9 00:00:20,570 --> 00:00:22,870 in order to figure out their chemical composition. 10 00:00:22,870 --> 00:00:25,870 [MUSIC PLAYING] 11 00:00:30,870 --> 00:00:33,170 Now you've probably all seen a rainbow. 12 00:00:33,170 --> 00:00:35,060 I really hope you have. 13 00:00:35,060 --> 00:00:37,130 And what happens in a rainbow? 14 00:00:37,130 --> 00:00:40,550 Well, white light comes through a little water droplet 15 00:00:40,550 --> 00:00:43,400 and it gets split up into the rainbow colors. 16 00:00:43,400 --> 00:00:45,980 And we do the same thing with a spectrograph 17 00:00:45,980 --> 00:00:47,810 mounted at a telescope. 18 00:00:47,810 --> 00:00:50,000 We take the starlight and we split it up 19 00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:52,550 into its rainbow colors. 20 00:00:52,550 --> 00:00:57,380 Now what we see when we do this is not just the rainbow. 21 00:00:57,380 --> 00:00:59,480 Actually, we see less than the rainbow, 22 00:00:59,480 --> 00:01:03,110 because there are certain colors of the rainbow missing. 23 00:01:03,110 --> 00:01:08,420 So if I draw this schematically here, I have a rainbow. 24 00:01:08,420 --> 00:01:17,510 And let's say I have blue here and then green and yellow, 25 00:01:17,510 --> 00:01:20,390 what I will see also is that there 26 00:01:20,390 --> 00:01:23,790 is a big line, something like this, missing here 27 00:01:23,790 --> 00:01:25,340 and it's black. 28 00:01:25,340 --> 00:01:30,770 And then there will be a few things here and a couple there 29 00:01:30,770 --> 00:01:32,900 and many really, really thin ones 30 00:01:32,900 --> 00:01:37,160 in between that are hard to see. 31 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:42,320 And that missing part, or those missing parts here, 32 00:01:42,320 --> 00:01:45,230 they contain all the information that we want. 33 00:01:45,230 --> 00:01:46,820 It's actually not the colors and such, 34 00:01:46,820 --> 00:01:49,730 it's what's missing from there. 35 00:01:49,730 --> 00:01:51,830 Now how can we understand that? 36 00:01:51,830 --> 00:01:56,690 If we come back to our stars and look at stellar surface, 37 00:01:56,690 --> 00:02:01,070 let's draw a surface layer here, and the core is here. 38 00:02:03,613 --> 00:02:05,780 We know that nuclear fusion is going on in the core, 39 00:02:05,780 --> 00:02:09,199 so it's really hot there, and energy comes out 40 00:02:09,199 --> 00:02:12,870 of the core in the form of hot photons. 41 00:02:12,870 --> 00:02:15,680 So we have these photons escaping from the core. 42 00:02:15,680 --> 00:02:19,340 And they come, they pass through this outer layer. 43 00:02:19,340 --> 00:02:24,620 Of course, we are sitting here with our telescope observing 44 00:02:24,620 --> 00:02:26,560 the stellar surface. 45 00:02:26,560 --> 00:02:29,180 All right, as I mentioned in a previous section, 46 00:02:29,180 --> 00:02:32,120 that we can't look into the core, 47 00:02:32,120 --> 00:02:34,628 we can only observe the surface here. 48 00:02:34,628 --> 00:02:36,170 And specifically what we're observing 49 00:02:36,170 --> 00:02:37,795 is we're observing all the photons that 50 00:02:37,795 --> 00:02:39,260 come off the surface. 51 00:02:42,160 --> 00:02:46,830 So in this outer layer we have hydrogen and helium atoms, 52 00:02:46,830 --> 00:02:49,470 because that's what the stars are mostly made of, 53 00:02:49,470 --> 00:02:50,395 hydrogen, helium. 54 00:02:53,040 --> 00:02:56,070 But, of course, there are-- unless we're talking about 55 00:02:56,070 --> 00:02:59,940 the very first stars, but that's a separate story-- 56 00:02:59,940 --> 00:03:04,650 there will be other atoms in here, iron, magnesium, carbon, 57 00:03:04,650 --> 00:03:09,420 oxygen. And so what happens is that all elements, hydrogen 58 00:03:09,420 --> 00:03:12,660 and helium as well, plus iron, magnesium, 59 00:03:12,660 --> 00:03:14,972 and so forth, they absorb. 60 00:03:14,972 --> 00:03:17,310 So let's draw this here. 61 00:03:17,310 --> 00:03:21,510 They absorb photons with their very specific energy 62 00:03:21,510 --> 00:03:24,310 or wavelength that's equivalent. 63 00:03:24,310 --> 00:03:29,167 And so what comes out of here, here is one that gets absorbed, 64 00:03:29,167 --> 00:03:30,750 all these get absorbed, and then there 65 00:03:30,750 --> 00:03:32,400 are some that pass through. 66 00:03:35,910 --> 00:03:37,565 So what we see here is all the ones 67 00:03:37,565 --> 00:03:38,940 that came through and, of course, 68 00:03:38,940 --> 00:03:43,140 not the ones that were absorbed by these atoms. 69 00:03:43,140 --> 00:03:45,180 And so that's exactly what we see here. 70 00:03:45,180 --> 00:03:47,760 The colors is everything that came through, 71 00:03:47,760 --> 00:03:52,740 and then the black lines here are the ones that are missing. 72 00:03:52,740 --> 00:03:54,690 So we can see what's missing. 73 00:03:54,690 --> 00:03:58,860 All the iron atoms here, they have absorbed all the photons 74 00:03:58,860 --> 00:04:02,400 at a specific color, at a specific wavelength. 75 00:04:02,400 --> 00:04:04,890 And so that's missing. 76 00:04:04,890 --> 00:04:07,920 However, this is actually not entirely black black. 77 00:04:07,920 --> 00:04:11,790 It has only a certain amount being absorbed, perhaps not 78 00:04:11,790 --> 00:04:12,780 completely. 79 00:04:12,780 --> 00:04:14,250 And so what we can measure is when 80 00:04:14,250 --> 00:04:16,529 we take a cross cut through this, 81 00:04:16,529 --> 00:04:18,840 we are going to get something that looks like this. 82 00:04:23,540 --> 00:04:27,540 And so there is a strong absorption here, 83 00:04:27,540 --> 00:04:28,490 less absorption here. 84 00:04:28,490 --> 00:04:30,430 Let's say that this is our calcium. 85 00:04:30,430 --> 00:04:32,090 That's a calcium line here. 86 00:04:32,090 --> 00:04:34,000 And these are three magnesium lines. 87 00:04:34,000 --> 00:04:36,310 These are two sodium lines. 88 00:04:36,310 --> 00:04:38,230 Then we can see from these line strength 89 00:04:38,230 --> 00:04:43,980 here what the abundance of the magnesium atoms here-- 90 00:04:43,980 --> 00:04:46,630 here is another one-- 91 00:04:46,630 --> 00:04:47,270 is. 92 00:04:47,270 --> 00:04:49,060 So line strength here corresponds 93 00:04:49,060 --> 00:04:54,640 to abundance of magnesium atoms in the outer atmosphere. 94 00:04:54,640 --> 00:04:57,040 And the nice thing, of course, is 95 00:04:57,040 --> 00:04:59,830 that when we want to find the most 96 00:04:59,830 --> 00:05:02,260 metal poor stars, or the oldest stars, then 97 00:05:02,260 --> 00:05:07,360 we want to look for stars whose spectra have very weak lines. 98 00:05:07,360 --> 00:05:08,485 Let's say like this. 99 00:05:12,040 --> 00:05:15,110 Because that means that only a little calcium, magnesium, 100 00:05:15,110 --> 00:05:19,402 and sodium actually are present in the star, 101 00:05:19,402 --> 00:05:20,860 which means that the star must have 102 00:05:20,860 --> 00:05:22,900 formed at a really early time when 103 00:05:22,900 --> 00:05:25,480 the cycle of chemical enrichment had only 104 00:05:25,480 --> 00:05:27,580 gone around a few times. 105 00:05:27,580 --> 00:05:32,710 So this is the secret of spectroscopy, absorption line 106 00:05:32,710 --> 00:05:33,990 spectroscopy. 107 00:05:33,990 --> 00:05:36,110 We take these kinds of data here and we 108 00:05:36,110 --> 00:05:37,510 measure the line strength. 109 00:05:37,510 --> 00:05:42,550 We measure how much is present here. 110 00:05:42,550 --> 00:05:46,480 And with the help of computer programs, 111 00:05:46,480 --> 00:05:49,450 and a whole bunch of physics, we can turn these lines strengths 112 00:05:49,450 --> 00:05:52,840 here into an abundance in the stellar surface, 113 00:05:52,840 --> 00:05:57,100 and that tells us about the formation time of these stars. 114 00:05:57,100 --> 00:06:00,150 [MUSIC PLAYING]