Public Lab Research note


Using Spectral Workbench to measure remote "black-body" surface temperature

by DrBeck | September 15, 2021 03:22 15 Sep 03:22 | #27726 | #27726

GOAL: To acquire spectra of stellar objects and calibrate/analyze them with the Spectral Workbench tool, so that one may easily extract a surface temperature from these 'black-body' emitters. By so doing, we can refine yet another approach to remote sensing of temperature from gaseous emitters at great distance. And..its fun!

Finally had time, and clear skies to acquire stellar spectra a new, inexpensive binoculars setup.


You can see the raw spectra for Capella, above. We obtained this on the night of 11SEP21, with a 200 line/mm flat transmission grating placed between the binocular eyepiece and the camera phone lens and uploaded the image the following day. We are still working on real-time means to do this. Although it appears to be a single star to the naked eye, Capella is actually a prominent binary star system made up of the stars Capella Aa and Capella Ab, with a weak companion binary known as Capella H, and Capella L. The companion pair, Capella H and Capella L, are two faint, small, relatively cool red dwarfs. Capella Aa and Capella Ab have exhausted their core hydrogen, cooled and expanded.

AIM THIS SPECIFIC EXPERIMENT: Can we determine two surface temperatures? That is, the surface temperatures for both yellow giants? We will use a technique known as Wien's Displacement. Let's see!

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WIEN'S DISPLACEMENT

From Wikipedia on Wien's Displacement

What Prof. Dr. Wien realized was this: that if what we are observing absorbs light, as well as, it emits light (that is, it is a "black-body") then its spectrum and the maximum wavelength emitted from it will be displaced depending on temperature. Hotter objects will emit maximum light in the blue-green region at shorter wavelengths, as is displayed above in a graph from Wikipedia - Wien Displacement. The formula to determine temperature (T) in Kelvin is straightforward, where b is Boltzmann's constant:T in Kelvin = b/Maximum wavelength in nanometers = 2,898,000 nm⋅K/ maximum wavelength in nanometers. That is, divide your maximum wavelength into Boltzmann's constant. Apply the formula to the spectra in the figure. Does it work for you? Great! This formula will work for any emission or object that emits light like a "black-body".


From our Public Lab's calibrated Capella spectra, we observe two peak regions (black line contour) determine that for a primary maximum peak in the blue-green, T = b/Maximum wavelength (490 nm) ~ 5900 K. With a secondary maximum peak in the yellow (570 nm), T ~ 5000 K. How close do we come to the surface temperatures in refereed journals? From this June 25, 2015 article (below), we can compare T= 4970 ± 50 K with our temperature of 5000 K and T= 5730 ± 60 K to our temperature of 5900 K. They both represent less than 10% difference, which is an acceptable error margin.


"CAPELLA (α AURIGAE) REVISITED: NEW BINARY ORBIT, PHYSICAL PROPERTIES, AND EVOLUTIONARY STATE

"Guillermo Torres, Antonio Claret, Krešimir Pavlovski, and Aaron Dotter_The Astrophysical Journal_, Volume 807, Number 1; Citation Guillermo Torres et al 2015 ApJ 807 26

ABSTRACT

"Knowledge of the chemical composition and absolute masses of Capella are key to understanding the evolutionary state of this benchmark binary system comprising two giant stars...Here we report a revision of the physical properties of the components incorporating recently published high-precision radial velocity measurements, and a new detailed chemical analysis providing abundances for more than 20 elements...effective temperatures of 4970 ± 50 and 5730 ± 60 K, and independently measured luminosities based on the orbital parallax... We find an excellent match to stellar evolution models at the measured composition..."


It appears that with this inexpensive binocular setup, reasonable spectra of luminous gaseous clouds may be obtained, Using Public Lab's Spectral Workbench, calibrating our spectra and using Wien's Displacement, affords an adequate means to measure surface temperature remotely.


5 Comments

Very impressive! It gets better with every read. Can you tell me how to figure out the set up for other instruments? For example, where can I find the setup needed for a 2 and 1/2 inch refractor telescope with a fire tablet? Thank you!

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That's if a fire tablet will even work!!!


Dear Ag8N,

First. Use the scientific method. Try one thing with an idea. Then try another if that fails. Sum it up.

What was "very impressive" for you about this experiment in spectroscopy? And in using The SpectralWorkBench of Public Labs? What experience have you had with spectroscopes and telescopes? If you're an experimenter, how have you done so far? i could refer you to a team better suited to work with you of a collaborative effort.

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Dr Beck,

First off, thank you for your reply.

Let me take this one at a time. What was impressive about this experiment? I'm a retired R&D Chemist for a major pharm/Medical device company. Many of the instruments routinely used cost $50k. If you wanted, it was easy to spend over a million dollars for them. So to see an instrument with similar capabilities for $30 is an acomplishment. As for spectral work bench, it is a good peice of software, as compared to much of the commercial software. Not As many features, not as traceable as needed for many USP requirements, but very good for the price. As for telescopes, I have had very limited experience with scopes from some of the local clubs. Spectroscopes? Ok . The lab had, and I routinely worked with, AA, microscope FTIR, EDXRF, UV/Vis, HPLC with DAD detector, HPLC with RI detector, GC/MS, NMR, as well as turbidity and nephelometry. The company restricted what we could publish, but you will still find a couple of papers out there.

Now, it's your turn.

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Thanks to everyone for sharing their new work, prior experiences, and aspirations on this thread ⭐️ . The community at Public Lab seeks to encourage each other while sharing what knowledge we can, and to articulate what we don't know in a way that invites others —whom we may not have even met yet—to contribute from their experiences as well. 🏆

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