Can the sun be blueshifted due to Earth's rotation?

In summary, the poster used a telescope to take a shot of the sun and on the bottom half of the circle there is a blue outline and on the other side is a red outline. This might be a display of the doppler effect, but it could also be just a coincidence.
  • #1
GetPhysical
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I used my telescope and a Solar filter to take a shot of the sun and on the bottom half of the circle (due to the mirrors inverting the image) there is a blue outline and on the other side is a red outline. Is this a display of the dopplar effect or just a coincidince?
 
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  • #2
It's chromatic aberation in your telescope (that's an optical fault in simple telescopes where the lenses can't focus all the colours equally well)

The doppler effect wouldn't have much effect on the light from a black body since any visible light that was red-shifted would be replaced by UV light that had been redshifted into the visible
 
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  • #3
I doubt it's a dopplar effect since to red/blue shift the Sun's primarily Yellow/green light to a degree that you notice the light as red/blue the velocities required would be immense (a good fraction of the speed of light).

By my calculations, it's somewhere around 10 percent the speed of light, or 30,000km/s

By comparison, the speed of the galaxy's rotation (basically as fast as it gets) is only around 220km/s for our Sun's local vicinity.
 
  • #4
None of the above. It's refraction due to the Earth's atmosphere bending different wavelengths of light by different amounts. The lower an object is to the horizon, the worse it gets. It's ok, though, many astronomical image editing programs have features to align the different color channels. I use Registax, which is a stacking program, but you can also do it manually with Photoshop.

Here's a very good example of it: http://cseligman.com/text/sky/atmosphericdispersion.htm
 
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  • #5
I'm pretty sure the OP is talking about chromatic aberration. It's very common and much more prominent than the effect russ mentions, which is only apparent near the horizon.

As an example, here's what I think the OP is talking about: http://23.media.tumblr.com/W9dg7rWdzgf45msuaH6xMS7ko1_500.jpg
 
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  • #6
ideasrule said:
I'm pretty sure the OP is talking about chromatic aberration.
I'm pretty sure it's not. With chromatic aberration, you have a ring around the entire object because one color will be focused while another won't be. With the effect in the OP, the colors are just misaligned.

Read the link I posted.

As an example, here's what I think the OP is talking about: http://23.media.tumblr.com/W9dg7rWdzgf45msuaH6xMS7ko1_500.jpg
Yes, that's what the OP is describing and it isn't chromatic aberration. It is very noticeably dependent on the altitude of the object above the horizon.

Here's another refrence, this one in Sky and Telescope, also referencing the function in Registax that is specifically designed to fix this issue:
If I used a color camera to record the image, it most likely displays color fringing caused by atmospheric dispersion. Here I utilize the RGBshift function...
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/howto/astrophotography/How_to_Process_Planetary_Images.html?page=2&c=y

Here's an example of chromatic aberration, which is a blue halo around the entire object (note: at the edge of the frame, they can be misfocused and misaligned): http://www.astropix.com/HTML/I_ASTROP/EQ_TESTS/C70_200.HTM
 
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  • #7
Theoretically there is a slight blue shift on the incoming side [and redshift on the outgoing side]. Too slight to be measurable. Is that an issue?
 
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  • #8
You'd never be able to see that shift. You need some advanced detectors to do it since the shift is at most a fraction of a nanometer in the wavelength.
 
  • #9
Matterwave said:
I doubt it's a dopplar effect since to red/blue shift the Sun's primarily Yellow/green light to a degree that you notice the light as red/blue the velocities required would be immense (a good fraction of the speed of light).

By my calculations, it's somewhere around 10 percent the speed of light, or 30,000km/s

By comparison, the speed of the galaxy's rotation (basically as fast as it gets) is only around 220km/s for our Sun's local vicinity.

Agreed.
 
  • #10
I'm with Russ on this one. How likely is it that the poster took a pic of the sun at zenith? Nil.
 
  • #11
chemisttree said:
I'm with Russ on this one. How likely is it that the poster took a pic of the sun at zenith? Nil.
It doesn't have to be at zenith, just well away from the horizon.

If the sun was off-center in the field of view, chromatic aberration won't be uniform around the circumference.

ca-bird.jpg


https://www.galileoscope.org/gs/sites/galileoscope.org.gs/files/Chromatic-Aberration.jpg

Source for moon photo:
https://www.galileoscope.org/gs/content/specifications
 

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  • #12
Chromatic abberation on a Newtonian? First I've heard of that one...

I used my telescope and a Solar filter to take a shot of the sun and on the bottom half of the circle (due to the mirrors inverting the image) there is a blue outline and on the other side is a red outline. Is this a display of the dopplar effect or just a coincidince?

What is the likelihood the poster was photographing the sun in Dob's hole?
 
  • #13
(due to the mirrors inverting the image)
Doesn't mean there actually were mirrors in the telescope - have you ever done computer tech support?
What people say is wrong rarely bears any resemblance when you get there.
 
  • #14
mgb_phys said:
Doesn't mean there actually were mirrors in the telescope - have you ever done computer tech support?
What people say is wrong rarely bears any resemblance when you get there.

Yes, there is that I suppose. I'm just reading what the poster typed.
 
  • #15
chemisttree said:
Chromatic abberation on a Newtonian? First I've heard of that one...
A cheap camera lens could produce chromatic aberration. The optical system is not 100% mirrors.
 
  • #16
So, you think it was a cheap camera that caused it?
 
  • #17
I'm saying the possibility is not ruled out. All the information we have is contained in post #1. There is no image posted, no mention of the camera or telescope type (except that the telescope has mirrors). We don't know if the sun was near zenith, near the horizon, or somewhere in between. We don't know the position of the sun within the image.

There has been no followup by the OP to clarify any of our speculation.
 
  • #18
Yes, that's what the OP is describing and it isn't chromatic aberration. It is very noticeably dependent on the altitude of the object above the horizon.

Here's another refrence, this one in Sky and Telescope, also referencing the function in Registax that is specifically designed to fix this issue: http://www.skyandtelescope.com/howto/astrophotography/How_to_Process_Planetary_Images.html?page=2&c=y

I stand corrected; I've always assumed, for some reason, that only chromatic aberration can produce a halo like that. (I should have known this wasn't the case because I often saw such a halo with my Newtonian telescope. I don't remember the effect being dependent on altitude, but that's probably because I wasn't looking for a dispersion vs. altitude relationship.)
 
  • #19
Redbelly98 said:
A cheap camera lens could produce chromatic aberration. The optical system is not 100% mirrors.
An astronomical camera is no mirrors or lenses - it's just a chip...though I am assuming a real astronomical camera was used. The telescope itself is the entire optics - and even then, it's just the objective and secondary. Ususally, you don't use eyepieces.

While you are right that the information we have doesn't quite rule out chromatic aberration, it does make chromatic aberration extremely unlikely. The OP said they used a telescope, which makes it very difficult to get an object the size of the sun completely off to one side in an imager.

I tend to answer these questions based on what is reasonable.
 
  • #20
Well, you do have a lot more experience in the subject than I. I've taken another look at one of my (non-astro) photos that had chromatic aberration, and there is only extraneous purple, no red, in it. Plus, I am kicking myself for forgetting that the primary+secondary mirrors alone, no added lenses, are the preferred way to take a photograph.:redface:
 

Related to Can the sun be blueshifted due to Earth's rotation?

1. Can the sun's light be affected by Earth's rotation?

Yes, Earth's rotation can cause the sun's light to be blueshifted or redshifted, depending on the direction of rotation. This is known as the Doppler effect, where the wavelength of light appears to change as the source of light moves towards or away from the observer.

2. How does Earth's rotation affect the color of the sun?

Earth's rotation does not directly affect the color of the sun. However, the Doppler effect caused by Earth's rotation can cause the sun's light to appear slightly bluer or redder, due to the change in wavelength caused by the relative motion between the Earth and the sun.

3. How does the sun's position in the sky affect its blueshift?

The sun's position in the sky does not directly affect its blueshift. However, the direction of Earth's rotation in relation to the sun's position can impact the amount of blueshift or redshift observed. For example, if Earth is rotating towards the sun, the light will be blueshifted, whereas if Earth is rotating away from the sun, the light will be redshifted.

4. Can the sun's blueshift be measured?

Yes, the sun's blueshift can be measured using spectroscopy. By analyzing the wavelengths of light emitted by the sun, scientists can determine the amount of blueshift or redshift and use this information to measure the velocity of the source, in this case, the sun.

5. Does the sun's blueshift have any practical applications?

Yes, the sun's blueshift and the Doppler effect in general have many practical applications in astronomy and other fields. For example, the Doppler effect is used to measure the speed and distance of stars and galaxies, and in weather forecasting to track the movement of storms. It is also used in medical imaging and in radar technology.

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