Kidsville NewsKidsville News
Menu

  • Home
  • About Kidsville News
  • Kids
    • Letter From Truman
    • Conservation Corner
    • Cool Kind Kid
    • Kidsville Connections
    • Kidsville Kitchen
    • Space Place
    • What’s It Like To be
    • Where in the World
    • Story Time with Truman
  • Parent/Teachers
    • Resources for Teachers and Parents
  • Contact Us
  • Become a Publisher

Space Place – August 2020

Space Place – August 2020

CategoriesKids / Space Place

219group

August 1, 2020

0 0

Share this post

WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM LIGHT?

By Teagan Wall

When you look up at the night sky and see stars, what you’re seeing is light produced by those stars many years ago. Because this is how we study the stars, it helps to know a few cool things about light. For example, light always travels at a constant speed, called the speed of light. It doesn’t matter if the star giving off light is moving towards us or away from us. This is different than most things.

Think of riding a skateboard while throwing a baseball. If the skateboard is moving toward the target when you throw the ball, the speed of the skateboard and the speed of the thrown ball combine. This means that the ball travels faster than it would have if you just threw the ball while standing still. But, if the skateboard is traveling away from the target when you throw the ball, the ball travels slower than it would have if you threw it while standing still. With light, though, it doesn’t matter how fast the skateboard is moving; the light will always travel at the same speed.

Another fun fact about light is that it is made out of waves kind of like the waves in the ocean — and those waves can come in different frequencies. The frequency measures how many peaks of a wave pass a certain point within a set amount of time. To understand how this works, think of a beach. If only one wave washes up on shore every minute, that’s pretty slow, or a low frequency. If one wave washes up every second, that’s more frequent. We’d say that those waves have a higher frequency.

With light, the frequency determines the color or type of light. We can see the colors of the rainbow: red through violet. Red is low frequency light and violet is higher frequency. There are also types of light that we can’t see that have a higher or lower frequency than the waves of visual light. We can use special telescopes to “see” these types of light coming from space, too! And these telescopes help N

Related Post

DECEMBER 31, 2020

What’s It Like To Be |...

Please tell our readers a little bit about yourself, including your name and your...

20

DECEMBER 31, 2020

How To Recognize and Prevent...

Many people are aware of the threat posed by carbon monoxide, or CO. According to the...

10

DECEMBER 31, 2020

Golden Knowledge

While the gold found in North America was usually in the form of dust or very fine...

50

DECEMBER 31, 2020

Hurricanes and Space

The United States had a rough hurricane season this year. Scientists collect information...

20

DECEMBER 31, 2020

Citizen Science

Are you interested in actually participating in the science? Well, citizen science may...

00

DECEMBER 31, 2020

Cultural Connections |...

Charles Christian Nahl Charles Christian Nahl was born in Germany in 1818. He studied as...

20

Categories

  • Around The World
  • Brainworks
  • Parentown KidSmart
  • Parentown KidShape
  • Teachers
  • Resources for Teachers and Parents
  • Parents
  • Come Out and Play
  • Cultural Connections
  • Movie Reviews for Kids by Kids
  • Weather
  • Wildville
  • Uncategorized
  • Story Time with Truman
  • Where in the World
  • What’s It Like To be
  • Space Place
  • Kidsville Kitchen
  • Kidsville Connections
  • Cool Kind Kid
  • Conservation Corner
  • Letter From Truman
  • Kids

© 2021 Kidsville News!, All Rights Reserved.