Lab Report On Hubble Law

Question # 00761344 Posted By: dr.tony Updated on: 05/14/2020 09:30 AM Due on: 05/14/2020
Subject Education Topic General Education Tutorials:
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Lab Report On Hubble Law

History of the Universe Lab, Hubble Law and the Age of the Universe

Table 1 - Data – Apparent Magnitude and Measured Wavelength of Calcium Lines

(Modified for remote class April 2020, LPP)

 

Galaxy ID

 

Apparent

Magnitude

(m)

λ Measured

Calcium K line

(Å)

λ Measured

Calcium H line

(Å)

 

36747

 

 

15.60

 

4130.0

 

4165.0

 

NGC 4889

 

 

12.50

 

4018.3

 

4055.0

 

NGC 7499

 

 

14.10

 

4088.9

 

4123.3

 

54875

 

 

16.90

 

4246.7

 

4283.3

 

51976

 

 

17.90

 

4445.0

 

4485.0

 

Table 2 – Calculated Velocity and Distance

 

Galaxy ID

 

 

Distance

(Mly)

 

Velocity from K line (km/s)

 

 

Velocity from H

Line (km/s)

 

 

Average V

(km/s)

 

36747

 

 

818

 

14,912

 

14,854

 

14, 833

 

NGC 4889

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NGC 7499

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

54875

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

51976

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Show one calculation of velocity on next page)

 

History of the Universe Lab, Hubble Law and the Age of the Universe

Table 3 – Present Hubble Parameter ( H0 ) and Age of the Universe

 

 

Age of the Universe

(calculated)

 

 

 

 

Hubble Parameter

(calculated)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Calculations (show one calculation of velocity, and calculations for Table 3)

 

History of the Universe Lab, Hubble Law and the Age of the Universe

Calculations

Velocity: Use the Doppler Equation to calculate the velocity of each galaxy due to the expansion of the universe.

For each galaxy calculate the velocity from each of the H and K lines and take the average for a more accurate answer.

Δλ/λ = v/c so v = c (Δλ/λ)

 

where Δλ = Measured λ - Lab λ and c = 300,000 km/sec.

 

Lab Wavelengths: K line is at 3933.7 Å; H is at 3968.5 Å.

 

Distance: Use the following table to get the distance to the galaxies. This comes from comparing the apparent magnitude to the assumed absolute magnitude of -21.4. This calculation involves logarithms which you will probably never see again and is omitted for the remote lab.

 

Apparent Magnitude (m)

Distance (Mly)

 

15.60

 

818

 

12.50

 

196

 

14.10

 

411

 

16.90

 

1,490

 

17.90

 

2,360

 

 

Calculating the Hubble Parameter and age of the universe:

 

By definition, H0 ((km/s)/Mly) = v (km/s)/d (Mly); My calculations give answers between 16 and 33 km/s per Mly so don’t let that bother you. (The accepted value is about 22.2)

 

Calculate H0 for each galaxy using the average velocity from the H and K lines and then average your answers to get a better answer.

 

The age of the universe is just 1/H (ignoring changes in H over time)

But to do the calculation you must get the units consistent. Change Mly to Km to get the age in seconds and then convert that to a more reasonable unit (like Billions of years!)

 

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