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AUDIENCE: The light
comes from the bulb.

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And it goes into the mirror, and
it bounces over to the paper.

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So that's how you can see
the reflection of the words

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on the paper.

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PROFESSOR: OK.

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Very nice.

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So in astronomy, whenever
we're dealing with something

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making images, which
we're going to use

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telescopes to make images.

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We're also going to use
cameras to make images,

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there's always three
important parts.

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One is the source of
light, whether that's

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a star or a planet or a
light bulb or something that

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produces light.

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You also have to
have a reflector,

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or a mirror, that
takes that light,

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reflects it, but also
focuses the light,

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kind of pulls it together.

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And then that is the light
bounces off the reflector

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and then goes to the detector.

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So I'm going to hold
this up for you.

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This is your detector, right?

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And the reason that we put
all these little squares on it

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is because real detectors, which
we call CCDs or charge coupled

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devices, are really
little pieces of silicon

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which have a bunch of
these little squares

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kind of drawn on them.

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Silicon is an element,
and it's particularly

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sensitive to light.

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And so we're going to see
that in a real telescope

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when light hits a particular
place on this detector,

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the detector records
where the light came in.

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Just like what you did here.

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You made the image
project over here.

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So everybody kind
of gathers around.

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I do have-- and Peter
if you could pull up

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the close up image
of the detector.

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Maybe put it up there.

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I want everybody to come
over here to table three,

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or table four.

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Four, I'm sorry.

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And I have an
actual CCD that was

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on the back of some
of the telescopes,

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and I'll let you
guys just take it.

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Can we turn the lights up?

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This is actually one of the
CCDs from the telescopes

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that we're going to use.

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We're going to use some
visible light telescopes.

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If you look really
closely, can you

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see the little tiny squares?

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What do you think?

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They're pretty small, right?

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They're actually-- what's that?

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AUDIENCE: Is that
nanotechnology?

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PROFESSOR: Not quite.

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So these squares are a couple
of micro-- not micrometers.

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Are they micrometers?

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I think they are a
couple of microns.

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So they are a couple of
millionths of an inch across.

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So they're very, very small.

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So you can't really see that.

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But if you look up
on the board, yeah

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I guess you have to go kind
of closer to the screen.

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Take a look at the screen.

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On the bottom half, this is the
edge of one of those detectors.

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On the top half, that's
the actual detector part.

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So what happened
with this detector

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was the bottom part
kind of short circuited,

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and it blew out, which is why
you see the weird kind of stuff

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there.

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But if you look
right up here, what

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do you see if we've
zoomed in a lot?

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[INTERPOSING VOICES]

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Some yellow stuff, what shape?

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They look like little squares.

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So on that little tiny
thing that's, like,

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a few millimeters by
a few millimeters,

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instead of having a big
detector like you had,

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like 8 1/2 by 11 inches, most
astronomical telescopes focus

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their light down onto
a tiny little chip.

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And each one of those squares
is sensitive to light.

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And that's how we detect light
and we make it into an image.

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We're going to talk a little
bit more about this process,

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but I just wanted you to
be a little bit familiar

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with the idea of
projecting an image

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and then projecting it to
a certain place in space,

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like we're going to project onto
that small piece of silicon.

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So what we're going to
do now is we're actually

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going to use some images
to learn about sizes.

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So we need you to
take your notes,

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and I want you to head back
over to your computer table.

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What did we decide were the
important quantities that

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00:04:03,260 --> 00:04:07,220
helped us decide what size or
what width something looked

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in the image?

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What can we change when we
take pictures of something

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to make to make Mars or to
make the guy in the tire

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look a different size?

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What are important quantities?

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Go ahead Bianca.

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Nice and loud.

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AUDIENCE: Perspective.

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PROFESSOR: Perspective.

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OK.

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What does that have to do with?

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AUDIENCE: Where you're
taking the picture.

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PROFESSOR: Where you're
taking the picture.

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So David?

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AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

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PROFESSOR: OK, go ahead.

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AUDIENCE: Magnification.

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PROFESSOR: OK.

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So magnification.

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We're not going to use
the zoom on our camera,

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00:04:41,087 --> 00:04:43,586
so we're actually not going to
deal with that for right now.

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We're just taking the picture.

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So as [INAUDIBLE]
said, perspective.

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What does that mean?

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AUDIENCE: Different angles.

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PROFESSOR: OK.

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Different angles.

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So we could take a picture from
the side or from the front.

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00:04:55,910 --> 00:04:57,393
[? Lauren, ?] you
had your hand up?

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00:04:57,393 --> 00:05:01,340
AUDIENCE: I was gonna say
distance is important.

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00:05:01,340 --> 00:05:02,460
PROFESSOR: OK.

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Is distance important?

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00:05:04,780 --> 00:05:05,280
OK.

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00:05:05,280 --> 00:05:08,982
What does distance have
to do with perspective?

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AUDIENCE: Closer you--
the closer you are,

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the larger something appears.

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00:05:13,650 --> 00:05:14,350
PROFESSOR: OK.

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So the distance
from your detector

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00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:18,910
or your camera to the object.

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Here, we said the tire
is closer to the camera.

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00:05:23,080 --> 00:05:25,900
There, you said the car
is closer to the camera.

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00:05:25,900 --> 00:05:28,660
Here, we said the--

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well there, we said the sun
is bigger than it really is,

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00:05:31,160 --> 00:05:31,660
right?

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00:05:31,660 --> 00:05:33,880
So you've got the
distance to the object,

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00:05:33,880 --> 00:05:35,890
but what is something
else that affects how

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00:05:35,890 --> 00:05:37,090
something looks in an image?

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00:05:40,260 --> 00:05:40,930
Go ahead, Nikki.

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00:05:40,930 --> 00:05:43,030
AUDIENCE: The right
position that you're

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00:05:43,030 --> 00:05:45,597
in, I guess it matters.

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00:05:45,597 --> 00:05:46,180
PROFESSOR: OK.

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The position of the object
or the relative position

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between the two objects.

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00:05:51,640 --> 00:05:52,390
Yeah.

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00:05:52,390 --> 00:05:54,766
So it matters, in
this case, if we're

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looking at two
different objects,

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it's the distance to
both of the objects that

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00:05:58,015 --> 00:05:59,200
makes a difference.

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00:05:59,200 --> 00:06:00,760
We're actually going to just
have you look at the distance

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00:06:00,760 --> 00:06:02,259
to one object here
in a minute, just

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00:06:02,259 --> 00:06:04,760
to make it a little
bit simpler, right?

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00:06:04,760 --> 00:06:06,304
But what else is important?

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Did you have your
hand up, [INAUDIBLE]??

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Go ahead, Chris.

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AUDIENCE: The actual
size of something?

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00:06:14,330 --> 00:06:14,913
PROFESSOR: OK.

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00:06:14,913 --> 00:06:16,340
The actual size of something.

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00:06:16,340 --> 00:06:21,140
We said if we put the toy car
that has a small actual size--

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00:06:21,140 --> 00:06:23,910
or let's just say actual
length of the car.

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00:06:23,910 --> 00:06:26,750
If we put the toy
car close, it looks

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00:06:26,750 --> 00:06:32,220
like it's the same length as
the car that's farther away.

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00:06:32,220 --> 00:06:34,130
So those two things
are really important.

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How far away something is,
the distance to the object,

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00:06:36,860 --> 00:06:39,080
And the actual
width of the object

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00:06:39,080 --> 00:06:41,580
or the actual height
of the object.

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00:06:41,580 --> 00:06:44,360
You have to match
those up to make sure

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00:06:44,360 --> 00:06:47,440
that you're getting
things to look the same.

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00:06:47,440 --> 00:06:48,990
So.