Something surrounds you. Bombards you. Some of which you can't see, touch, or even feel. Every day, everywhere you go. It is odorless and tasteless. Yet you use it and depend on it every hour of every day. Without it the world you know could not exist. What is it? Electromagnetic radiation. These waves spread across the spectrum from very short gamma rays to x-rays, ultraviolet rays, visible light rays, even longer infrared light waves, microwaves, to radio waves which can measure longer than a mountain range. This spectrum is the foundation of the information age and of our modern world. Your radio, remote control, text message, television, microwave oven, even a doctor's x-ray, all depend on waves within the electromagnetic spectrum.
Electromagnetic waves, or EM waves, are similar to ocean waves in that both are energy waves. They transmit energy. EM waves are produced by the vibration of charged particles and have electrical and magnetic properties. But unlike ocean waves that require water, EM waves travel through the vacuum of space at the constant speed of light. EM waves have crests and troughs like ocean waves. The distance between crests is the wavelength. While some EM wavelengths are very long and are measured in meters, many are tiny and are measured in billionths of a meter, nanometers. The number of these crests that pass a given point within one second is described as the frequency of the wave. One wave or cycle per second is called a Hertz. Long EM waves, such as radio waves, have the lowest frequency and carry less energy. Adding energy increases the frequency of the wave and makes the wavelength shorter. Gamma rays are the shortest, highest energy waves in the spectrum. So, as you sit watching TV, not only are there visible light waves from the TV striking your eyes, but also radio waves transmitting from a nearby station; and microwaves carrying cellphone calls and text messages; and waves from your neighbors Wi-Fi and GPS units in the cars driving by. There's a chaos of waves from all across the spectrum passing through your room right now.
With all of these waves around you, how can you possibly watch your TV show. Similar to tuning a radio to a specific radio station, our eyes are tuned to a specific region of the EM spectrum and can detect energy with wavelengths from 400 to 700 nanometers. The visible light region of the spectrum. Objects appear to have color because EM waves interact with their molecules. Some wavelengths in the visible spectrum are reflected and other wavelengths are absorbed. This leaf looks green because EM waves interact with the chlorophyl molecules. Waves between 492 and 577 nanometers in length are reflected and our eye interprets this as the leaf being green. Our eyes see the leaf as green but cannot tell us anything about how the leaf reflects ultraviolet, microwave, or infrared waves.
To learn more about the world around us, scientists and engineers have devised ways to enable us to see beyond that sliver of the EM spectrum called visible light. Data from multiple wavelengths help scientists study all kinds of amazing phenomena on Earth from seasonal change to specific habitats. Everything around us emits, reflects, and absorbs EM radiation differently based on it's composition. A graph across the EM spectrum is called the spectral signature. Characteristic patterns like fingerprints within the spectra allow scientists to determine an object's chemical composition and to determine such physical properties as temperature and density.
NASA's Spitzer space telescope observed the presence of water and organic molecules in a galaxy 3.2 billion light years away. Viewing our sun in multiple wavelengths with the SOHO satellite allows scientists to study and understand sunspots that are associated with solar flares and eruptions that are harmful to satellites, astronauts and communications here on Earth.
We are constantly learning more about our world and universe by taking advantage of the unique information contained in the different waves across the EM spectrum.