Want to discover the chemical make-up of distant stars and planets? Use a spectroscope. It displays a little rainbow of visible-light spectrum that’s emitted
by a star (or reflected by a planet).
Each element in the periodic table has its own spectral signature — say, bright emission lines in the red band, or dark absorption lines in the green — so each element can be identified by its light alone.
MAKE Volume 24 shows you how to make a high-resolution spectroscope for $20 using common pipe and hardware. To turn it into a spectrograph that’ll reveal if you’re looking at a gas giant or a rocky planetoid, just team it with a digital camera and author Simon Quellen Field’s online spectrum analyzer (we show you that, too).
MAKE blasts into orbit and beyond with our DIY SPACE issue. Put your own satellite in orbit, launch a stratosphere balloon probe, and analyze galaxies for $20 with an easy spectrograph! We talk to the rocket mavericks reinventing the space industry, and renegade NASA hackers making smartphone robots and Lego satellites. This, plus a full payload of other cool DIY projects, from a helium-balloon camera that’s better than Google Earth, to an electromagnetic levitator that shoots aluminum rings, and much more. MAKE Volume 24, on sale now.
What will the next generation of Make: look like? We’re inviting you to shape the future by investing in Make:. By becoming an investor, you help decide what’s next. The future of Make: is in your hands. Learn More.
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