Lab Report On Hubble Law

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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Solution: Lab Report On Hubble Law