Science·Space Exploration·conceptual
Observing with Light Waves
Explain how the electromagnetic spectrum is the primary tool of modern astronomy — different wavelengths (radio, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, X-ray, gamma-ray) reveal different phenomena, why some telescopes must be in space, and what specific discoveries each wavelength range has enabled (e.g. CMB in microwave, black hole jets in X-ray, cold gas clouds in radio)
Suggested ages 11–13
Evidence of understanding
- Lists at least four regions of the EM spectrum and gives a specific astronomical object or phenomenon observed in each
- Explains why some telescopes must be placed in space (Earth's atmosphere blocks X-ray, gamma-ray, and much infrared radiation)
- Describes the James Webb Space Telescope or Hubble and explains which part of the spectrum each primarily observes and why that was chosen
Assessment prompt
If Observing with Light Waves was told that we can't see most of the universe with our eyes, could they explain why — and describe two types of telescope that detect something other than visible light, naming what they've helped us discover?
Standards alignment
No external standards are linked to this topic.