Skip to main content
FEATURED
Launchpad: Neon Lights - Spectroscopy in Action
Launchpad: Apollo 11 - Challenges of Landing on the Moon
Launchpad: Apollo 11 - History in the Making
Launchpad: Astrobiology
Launchpad: Atmosphere and Optical Telescopes
Launchpad: Bernoulli's Principle On-Board the International Space Station
Launchpad: Biofeedback
Launchpad: Clouds and Earth's Radiation Budget
Launchpad: Cohesion and Adhesion On-Board the International Space Station
Launchpad: Contrails
Launchpad: Cryogenics - The Cold Hard Facts
Launchpad: Cryogenics in Transportation
Launchpad: Curiosity Goes to Mars
Launchpad: Data Loggers
Launchpad: Descent and Landing - It's a Matter of Control
Launchpad: Engineering Design to Support Scientific Discovery
Launchpad: Fluid Dynamics - What a Drag!
Launchpad: Food Availability for the Mission to Mars
Launchpad: Food for Thought
Launchpad: Gigapan
Launchpad: History, Benefits, and Safety of Radioisotope Power Systems
Launchpad: ICESat-2 - Next Generation Technology
Launchpad: Infrared Astronomy on Mauna Kea
Launchpad: Kepler
Launchpad: Life Cycle of a Star
Launchpad: Light Detection and Ranging
Launchpad: Mapping the Boundaries of Our Solar System
Launchpad: Maps
Launchpad: Methane - An Indicator for Life?
Launchpad: Methane on Mars
Launchpad: Mission Infusion - A Look at What's Ahead
Launchpad: Moon Magic
Launchpad: NASA and Biosphere 2
Launchpad: NASA in 3D
Launchpad: NASA Technologies Helping Firefighters
Launchpad: NASA Technologies Used to Treat Acne and Orthodontics
Launchpad: NASA's History of Winter Program
Launchpad: NASA's Space Shuttle - A Workhorse in Action
Launchpad: Neon Lights - Spectroscopy in Action
Launchpad: New Horizons Covers the Distance
Launchpad: New Horizons Heads Towards Pluto
Launchpad: Newton's Laws On-Board the International Space Station
Launchpad: Night Shining Clouds
Launchpad: Phase Diagrams and Why You Cannot Make a Snowball on Mars
Launchpad: Pumping Up the Volume
Launchpad: SAGE III Goes to the International Space Station
Launchpad: Solar Eclipses
Launchpad: Space Age Technologies Measure Soil Moisture
Launchpad: Spinoffs - Technology Benefits For All
Launchpad: Surface Tension On-Board the International Space Station
Launchpad: Systems Science
Launchpad: The Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope
Launchpad: The Heat Is On!
Launchpad: The Lighter Side
Launchpad: The Search for Exoplanets
Launchpad: The Shuttle Experience
Launchpad: Thin Ice - Looking at Birefringence
Launchpad: Transits
Launchpad: Using Technology to Make Discoveries on Mars
Launchpad: Wave Motion
Launchpad: What Are Radioisotope Power Systems?
Launchpad: Aurora Lights: Why They Exist and What Causes Them

Launchpad: Neon Lights - Spectroscopy in Action

Play video - Launchpad: Neon Lights - Spectroscopy in Action
Description

Discover how scientists use spectroscopy to determine what elements are present in remote objects in space. By studying emission or absorption lines, astronomers can use the light an object emits to learn more about the object.

Published on: April 09, 2013

Download High Def. Video
Download Caption File
NOTE: Download Caption file and link it in your player to get caption in the video.

Related Links

Related NASA eClips Resources

Activities

Mathematics

NASA, NIA, eClips, Launchpad, Secondary, Video, Education, Technology, Science, Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy, emission lines, absorption lines, spectral signature, wavelengths, Hubble, prism, visible light, electromagnetic spectrum, neon, argon, spectrogr