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Infrared light lies between the visible
and microwave portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. Infrared light has a
range of wavelengths, just like visible light has wavelengths that range from
red light
Far infrared waves are thermal. In other words, we experience this type of infrared radiation every day in the form of heat! The heat that we feel from sunlight, a fire, a radiator or a warm sidewalk is infrared. Shorter, near infrared waves are not hot at all - in fact you cannot even feel them. These shorter wavelengths are the ones used by your TV's remote control. How can we "see" using the Infrared?Since the primary source of infrared radiation is heat or
thermal radiation, any object which has a temperature radiates in the infrared.
Even objects that we think of as being very cold, such as an ice cube, emit
infrared. When an object is not quite hot enough to radiate visible light, it
will emit most of its energy in the infrared. For example, hot charcoal may not
give off To make infrared pictures like the one at left, we use special cameras and film that detect differences in temperature, and then assign different brightnesses or false colors to them. This provides a picture that our eyes can interpret. The image at the left (courtesy of SE-IR Corporation, Goleta, CA) shows a cat in the infrared. The orange areas are the warmest and the white-blue areas are the coldest. This image gives us a different view of a familiar animal as well as information that we could not get from a visible light picture. |
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