查看“Astropulse:电磁辐射”的源代码
←
Astropulse:电磁辐射
跳转到导航
跳转到搜索
因为以下原因,您没有权限编辑该页面:
您请求的操作仅限属于该用户组的用户执行:
用户
您可以查看和复制此页面的源代码。
<big>'''Electromagnetic Radiation'''</big> Electromagnetic radiation includes radio waves, microwaves, infrared light, visible light, ultraviolet light, x-rays, and gamma rays. All of these types of radiation can be thought of as waves, like the ripples that spread out when you drop a pebble into a calm pool of water. An electromagnetic wave has a few important properties: # Speed: how fast is each ripple moving? # Frequency: if you point at the water with your finger, how many ripples pass by your finger every second? # Wavelength: the distance between two adjacent ripples. The speed is easy. It turns out that all electromagnetic waves have the same speed, which scientists represent with the letter c. This speed, the speed of light, is equal to 670 million miles per hour. The frequency can be any number. It is measured in Hertz, which means "One ripple per second." If two ripples pass by your finger every second, that's 2 Hertz. Most electromagnetic radiation has frequencies much larger than 1 Hertz. So we use larger units to measure the frequency: {| |kHz||kiloHertz, one thousand Hertz. (1,000) |- |MHz||MegaHertz, one million Hertz. (1,000,000) |- |GHz||GigaHertz, one billion Hertz. (1,000,000,000) |} For numbers that are too large to express this way, we use "scientific notation", which is just a way of saying how many zeroes are after a number. For instance, 1 MegaHertz could be written 1E6 Hertz, meaning 1 with 6 zeroes after it. 2 GigaHertz is 2E9 Hertz. And 8,000,000,000,000 Hertz is 8E12 Hertz. Here are some examples of frequencies of electromagnetic waves: * {| |long-wave AM radio||200 kHz |- |medium-wave AM radio||1 MHz |- |short-wave AM radio||10 MHz |- |FM Radio waves||100 MHz |- |Microwaves in a microwave oven||2.4 GHz |- |Infrared light||3E12 Hz |- |Red light||4E14 Hz |- |Green light||6E14 Hz |- |Blue light ||7E14 Hz |- |Ultraviolet light||1E15 Hz |- |X-rays||3E18 Hz |- |Gamma rays||3E20 Hz |} "Frequency" means the same thing for electromagnetic waves that it does for sound waves. In a sound wave, the frequency is the number of sound ripples that pass by in one second. For instance, the "A 440" note, which orchestras use to tune up, has a frequency of 440 Hz. The difference is that in an electromagnetic wave, the ripples are made of electric and magnetic fields, whereas in a sound wave, the ripples are made of moving air. Both Astropulse and the original SETI@home use frequencies around 1,420 MHz, ranging from 1,417.5 MHz from 1422.5 MHz. * In fact, each of these waves actually has a range of frequencies. For instance, FM radio waves actually range from 87.5 to 108.0 MHz. [[Category:Astropulse]][[Category:SETI@home]][[Category:待翻译]]
返回
Astropulse:电磁辐射
。
导航菜单
个人工具
登录
命名空间
页面
讨论
大陆简体
查看
阅读
查看源代码
查看历史
更多
搜索
导航
首页
关于我们
教程指南
文献资料
项目介绍
程序下载
分布式论坛
工具
链入页面
相关更改
特殊页面
页面信息