![Infrared](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi9jL2NmL0lyX2dpcmwucG5nLzE2MDBweC1Jcl9naXJsLnBuZw==.png )
Infrared (IR; sometimes called infrared light) is electromagnetic radiation (EMR) with wavelengths longer than that of visible light but shorter than microwaves. The infrared spectral band begins with waves that are just longer than those of red light (the longest waves in the visible spectrum), so IR is invisible to the human eye. IR is generally understood to include wavelengths from around 750 nm (400 THz) to 1 mm (300 GHz). IR is commonly divided between longer-wavelength thermal IR, emitted from terrestrial sources, and shorter-wavelength IR or near-IR, part of the solar spectrum. Longer IR wavelengths (30–100 μm) are sometimes included as part of the terahertz radiation band. Almost all black-body radiation from objects near room temperature is in the IR band. As a form of EMR, IR carries energy and momentum, exerts radiation pressure, and has properties corresponding to both those of a wave and of a particle, the photon.
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It was long known that fires emit invisible heat; in 1681 the pioneering experimenter Edme Mariotte showed that glass, though transparent to sunlight, obstructed radiant heat. In 1800 the astronomer Sir William Herschel discovered that infrared radiation is a type of invisible radiation in the spectrum lower in energy than red light, by means of its effect on a thermometer. Slightly more than half of the energy from the Sun was eventually found, through Herschel's studies, to arrive on Earth in the form of infrared. The balance between absorbed and emitted infrared radiation has an important effect on Earth's climate.
Infrared radiation is emitted or absorbed by molecules when changing rotational-vibrational movements. It excites vibrational modes in a molecule through a change in the dipole moment, making it a useful frequency range for study of these energy states for molecules of the proper symmetry. Infrared spectroscopy examines absorption and transmission of photons in the infrared range.
Infrared radiation is used in industrial, scientific, military, commercial, and medical applications. Night-vision devices using active near-infrared illumination allow people or animals to be observed without the observer being detected. Infrared astronomy uses sensor-equipped telescopes to penetrate dusty regions of space such as molecular clouds, to detect objects such as planets, and to view highly red-shifted objects from the early days of the universe. Infrared thermal-imaging cameras are used to detect heat loss in insulated systems, to observe changing blood flow in the skin, to assist firefighting, and to detect the overheating of electrical components. Military and civilian applications include target acquisition, surveillance, night vision, homing, and tracking. Humans at normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 μm. Non-military uses include thermal efficiency analysis, environmental monitoring, industrial facility inspections, detection of grow-ops, remote temperature sensing, short-range wireless communication, spectroscopy, and weather forecasting.
Definition and relationship to the electromagnetic spectrum
There is no universally accepted definition of the range of infrared radiation. Typically, it is taken to extend from the nominal red edge of the visible spectrum at 780 nm to 1 mm. This range of wavelengths corresponds to a frequency range of approximately 430 THz down to 300 GHz. Beyond infrared is the microwave portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Increasingly, terahertz radiation is counted as part of the microwave band, not infrared, moving the band edge of infrared to 0.1 mm (3 THz).
Name | Wavelength | Frequency (Hz) | Photon energy (eV) |
---|---|---|---|
Gamma ray | less than 10 pm | more than 30 EHz | more than 124 keV |
X-ray | 10 pm – 10 nm | 30 PHz – 30 EHz | 124 keV – 124 eV |
Ultraviolet | 10 nm – 400 nm | 750 THz – 30 PHz | 124 eV – 3.3 eV |
Visible | 400 nm – 700 nm | 430 THz – 750 THz | 3.3 eV – 1.7 eV |
Infrared | 700 nm – 1 mm | 300 GHz – 430 THz | 1.7 eV – 1.24 meV |
Microwave | 1 mm – 1 meter | 300 MHz – 300 GHz | 1.24 meV – 1.24 μeV |
Radio | 1 meter and more | 300 MHz and below | 1.24 μeV and below |
Nature
Sunlight, at an effective temperature of 5,780 K (5,510 °C, 9,940 °F), is composed of near-thermal-spectrum radiation that is slightly more than half infrared. At zenith, sunlight provides an irradiance of just over 1 kW per square meter at sea level. Of this energy, 527 W is infrared radiation, 445 W is visible light, and 32 W is ultraviolet radiation. Nearly all the infrared radiation in sunlight is near infrared, shorter than 4 μm.
On the surface of Earth, at far lower temperatures than the surface of the Sun, some thermal radiation consists of infrared in the mid-infrared region, much longer than in sunlight. Black-body, or thermal, radiation is continuous: it radiates at all wavelengths. Of these natural thermal radiation processes, only lightning and natural fires are hot enough to produce much visible energy, and fires produce far more infrared than visible-light energy.
Regions
In general, objects emit infrared radiation across a spectrum of wavelengths, but sometimes only a limited region of the spectrum is of interest because sensors usually collect radiation only within a specific bandwidth. Thermal infrared radiation also has a maximum emission wavelength, which is inversely proportional to the absolute temperature of object, in accordance with Wien's displacement law. The infrared band is often subdivided into smaller sections, although how the IR spectrum is thereby divided varies between different areas in which IR is employed.
Visible limit
Infrared radiation is generally considered to begin with wavelengths longer than visible by the human eye. There is no hard wavelength limit to what is visible, as the eye's sensitivity decreases rapidly but smoothly, for wavelengths exceeding about 700 nm. Therefore wavelengths just longer than that can be seen if they are sufficiently bright, though they may still be classified as infrared according to usual definitions. Light from a near-IR laser may thus appear dim red and can present a hazard since it may actually be quite bright. Even IR at wavelengths up to 1,050 nm from pulsed lasers can be seen by humans under certain conditions.
Commonly used subdivision scheme
A commonly used subdivision scheme is:
Division name | Abbreviation | Wavelength | Frequency | Photon energy | Temperature | Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Near-infrared | NIR, IR-A DIN | 0.75–1.4 μm | 214–400 THz | 886–1,653 meV | 3,864–2,070 K (3,591–1,797 °C) | Goes up to the wavelength of the first water absorption band, and commonly used in fiber optic telecommunication because of low attenuation losses in the SiO2 glass (silica) medium. Image intensifiers are sensitive to this area of the spectrum; examples include night vision devices such as night vision goggles. Near-infrared spectroscopy is another common application. |
Short-wavelength infrared | SWIR, IR-B DIN | 1.4–3 μm | 100–214 THz | 413–886 meV | 2,070–966 K (1,797–693 °C) | Water absorption increases significantly at 1,450 nm. The 1,530 to 1,560 nm range is the dominant spectral region for long-distance telecommunications (see transmission windows). |
Mid-wavelength infrared | MWIR, IR-C DIN; MidIR. Also called intermediate infrared (IIR) | 3–8 μm | 37–100 THz | 155–413 meV | 966–362 K (693–89 °C) | In guided missile technology the 3–5 μm portion of this band is the atmospheric window in which the seekers of passive IR 'heat seeking' missiles are designed to work, homing on to the infrared signature of the target aircraft, typically the jet engine exhaust plume. This region is also known as thermal infrared. |
Long-wavelength infrared | LWIR, IR-C DIN | 8–15 μm | 20–37 THz | 83–155 meV | 362–193 K (89 – −80 °C) | The "thermal imaging" region, in which sensors can obtain a completely passive image of objects only slightly higher in temperature than room temperature – for example, the human body – based on thermal emissions only and requiring no illumination such as the sun or moon or an infrared illuminator. This region is also called the "thermal infrared". |
Far-infrared | FIR | 15–1,000 μm | 0.3–20 THz | 1.2–83 meV | 193–3 K (−80.15 – −270.15 °C) | (see also far-infrared laser and far-infrared) |
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NIR and SWIR together is sometimes called "reflected infrared", whereas MWIR and LWIR is sometimes referred to as "thermal infrared".
CIE division scheme
The International Commission on Illumination (CIE) recommended the division of infrared radiation into the following three bands:
Abbreviation | Wavelength | Frequency |
---|---|---|
IR-A | 780–1400 nm | 215–384 THz |
IR-B | 1400–3000 nm | 100–215 THz |
IR-C | 3–1000 μm | 0.3–100 THz |
ISO 20473 scheme
ISO 20473 specifies the following scheme:
Designation | Abbreviation | Wavelength |
---|---|---|
Near-infrared | NIR | 0.78–3 μm |
Mid-infrared | MIR | 3–50 μm |
Far-infrared | FIR | 50–1,000 μm |
Astronomy division scheme
Astronomers typically divide the infrared spectrum as follows:
Designation | Abbreviation | Wavelength |
---|---|---|
Near-infrared | NIR | 0.7–2.5 μm |
Mid-infrared | MIR | 3–25 μm |
Far-infrared | FIR | above 25 μm |
These divisions are not precise and can vary depending on the publication. The three regions are used for observation of different temperature ranges, and hence different environments in space.
The most common photometric system used in astronomy allocates capital letters to different spectral regions according to filters used; I, J, H, and K cover the near-infrared wavelengths; L, M, N, and Q refer to the mid-infrared region. These letters are commonly understood in reference to atmospheric windows and appear, for instance, in the titles of many papers.
Sensor response division scheme
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A third scheme divides up the band based on the response of various detectors:
- Near-infrared: from 0.7 to 1.0 μm (from the approximate end of the response of the human eye to that of silicon).
- Short-wave infrared: 1.0 to 3 μm (from the cut-off of silicon to that of the MWIR atmospheric window). InGaAs covers to about 1.8 μm; the less sensitive lead salts cover this region. Cryogenically cooled MCT detectors can cover the region of 1.0–2.5 μm.
- Mid-wave infrared: 3 to 5 μm (defined by the atmospheric window and covered by indium antimonide, InSb and mercury cadmium telluride, HgCdTe, and partially by lead selenide, PbSe).
- Long-wave infrared: 8 to 12, or 7 to 14 μm (this is the atmospheric window covered by HgCdTe and microbolometers).
- Very-long wave infrared (VLWIR) (12 to about 30 μm, covered by doped silicon).
Near-infrared is the region closest in wavelength to the radiation detectable by the human eye. mid- and far-infrared are progressively further from the visible spectrum. Other definitions follow different physical mechanisms (emission peaks, vs. bands, water absorption) and the newest follow technical reasons (the common silicon detectors are sensitive to about 1,050 nm, while InGaAs's sensitivity starts around 950 nm and ends between 1,700 and 2,600 nm, depending on the specific configuration). No international standards for these specifications are currently available.
The onset of infrared is defined (according to different standards) at various values typically between 700 nm and 800 nm, but the boundary between visible and infrared light is not precisely defined. The human eye is markedly less sensitive to light above 700 nm wavelength, so longer wavelengths make insignificant contributions to scenes illuminated by common light sources. Particularly intense near-IR light (e.g., from lasers, LEDs or bright daylight with the visible light filtered out) can be detected up to approximately 780 nm, and will be perceived as red light. Intense light sources providing wavelengths as long as 1,050 nm can be seen as a dull red glow, causing some difficulty in near-IR illumination of scenes in the dark (usually this practical problem is solved by indirect illumination). Leaves are particularly bright in the near IR, and if all visible light leaks from around an IR-filter are blocked, and the eye is given a moment to adjust to the extremely dim image coming through a visually opaque IR-passing photographic filter, it is possible to see the Wood effect that consists of IR-glowing foliage.
Telecommunication bands
In optical communications, the part of the infrared spectrum that is used is divided into seven bands based on availability of light sources, transmitting/absorbing materials (fibers), and detectors:
Band | Descriptor | Wavelength range |
---|---|---|
O band | Original | 1,260–1,360 nm |
E band | Extended | 1,360–1,460 nm |
S band | Short wavelength | 1,460–1,530 nm |
C band | Conventional | 1,530–1,565 nm |
L band | Long wavelength | 1,565–1,625 nm |
U band | Ultralong wavelength | 1,625–1,675 nm |
The C-band is the dominant band for long-distance telecommunications networks. The S and L bands are based on less well established technology, and are not as widely deployed.
Heat
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Infrared radiation is popularly known as "heat radiation", but light and electromagnetic waves of any frequency will heat surfaces that absorb them. Infrared light from the Sun accounts for 49% of the heating of Earth, with the rest being caused by visible light that is absorbed then re-radiated at longer wavelengths. Visible light or ultraviolet-emitting lasers can char paper and incandescently hot objects emit visible radiation. Objects at room temperature will emit radiation concentrated mostly in the 8 to 25 μm band, but this is not distinct from the emission of visible light by incandescent objects and ultraviolet by even hotter objects (see black body and Wien's displacement law).
Heat is energy in transit that flows due to a temperature difference. Unlike heat transmitted by thermal conduction or thermal convection, thermal radiation can propagate through a vacuum. Thermal radiation is characterized by a particular spectrum of many wavelengths that are associated with emission from an object, due to the vibration of its molecules at a given temperature. Thermal radiation can be emitted from objects at any wavelength, and at very high temperatures such radiation is associated with spectra far above the infrared, extending into visible, ultraviolet, and even X-ray regions (e.g. the solar corona). Thus, the popular association of infrared radiation with thermal radiation is only a coincidence based on typical (comparatively low) temperatures often found near the surface of planet Earth.
The concept of emissivity is important in understanding the infrared emissions of objects. This is a property of a surface that describes how its thermal emissions deviate from the ideal of a black body. To further explain, two objects at the same physical temperature may not show the same infrared image if they have differing emissivity. For example, for any pre-set emissivity value, objects with higher emissivity will appear hotter, and those with a lower emissivity will appear cooler (assuming, as is often the case, that the surrounding environment is cooler than the objects being viewed). When an object has less than perfect emissivity, it obtains properties of reflectivity and/or transparency, and so the temperature of the surrounding environment is partially reflected by and/or transmitted through the object. If the object were in a hotter environment, then a lower emissivity object at the same temperature would likely appear to be hotter than a more emissive one. For that reason, incorrect selection of emissivity and not accounting for environmental temperatures will give inaccurate results when using infrared cameras and pyrometers.
Applications
Night vision
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Infrared is used in night vision equipment when there is insufficient visible light to see.Night vision devices operate through a process involving the conversion of ambient light photons into electrons that are then amplified by a chemical and electrical process and then converted back into visible light. Infrared light sources can be used to augment the available ambient light for conversion by night vision devices, increasing in-the-dark visibility without actually using a visible light source.
The use of infrared light and night vision devices should not be confused with thermal imaging, which creates images based on differences in surface temperature by detecting infrared radiation (heat) that emanates from objects and their surrounding environment.
Thermography
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Infrared radiation can be used to remotely determine the temperature of objects (if the emissivity is known). This is termed thermography, or in the case of very hot objects in the NIR or visible it is termed pyrometry. Thermography (thermal imaging) is mainly used in military and industrial applications but the technology is reaching the public market in the form of infrared cameras on cars due to greatly reduced production costs.
Thermographic cameras detect radiation in the infrared range of the electromagnetic spectrum (roughly 9,000–14,000 nm or 9–14 μm) and produce images of that radiation. Since infrared radiation is emitted by all objects based on their temperatures, according to the black-body radiation law, thermography makes it possible to "see" one's environment with or without visible illumination. The amount of radiation emitted by an object increases with temperature, therefore thermography allows one to see variations in temperature (hence the name).
Hyperspectral imaging
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A hyperspectral image is a "picture" containing continuous spectrum through a wide spectral range at each pixel. Hyperspectral imaging is gaining importance in the field of applied spectroscopy particularly with NIR, SWIR, MWIR, and LWIR spectral regions. Typical applications include biological, mineralogical, defence, and industrial measurements.
Thermal infrared hyperspectral imaging can be similarly performed using a thermographic camera, with the fundamental difference that each pixel contains a full LWIR spectrum. Consequently, chemical identification of the object can be performed without a need for an external light source such as the Sun or the Moon. Such cameras are typically applied for geological measurements, outdoor surveillance and UAV applications.
Other imaging
In infrared photography, infrared filters are used to capture the near-infrared spectrum. Digital cameras often use infrared blockers. Cheaper digital cameras and camera phones have less effective filters and can view intense near-infrared, appearing as a bright purple-white color. This is especially pronounced when taking pictures of subjects near IR-bright areas (such as near a lamp), where the resulting infrared interference can wash out the image. There is also a technique called 'T-ray' imaging, which is imaging using far-infrared or terahertz radiation. Lack of bright sources can make terahertz photography more challenging than most other infrared imaging techniques. Recently T-ray imaging has been of considerable interest due to a number of new developments such as terahertz time-domain spectroscopy.
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Tracking
Infrared tracking, also known as infrared homing, refers to a passive missile guidance system, which uses the emission from a target of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared part of the spectrum to track it. Missiles that use infrared seeking are often referred to as "heat-seekers" since infrared (IR) is just below the visible spectrum of light in frequency and is radiated strongly by hot bodies. Many objects such as people, vehicle engines, and aircraft generate and retain heat, and as such, are especially visible in the infrared wavelengths of light compared to objects in the background.
Heating
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Infrared radiation can be used as a deliberate heating source. For example, it is used in infrared saunas to heat the occupants. It may also be used in other heating applications, such as to remove ice from the wings of aircraft (de-icing).
Infrared heating is also becoming more popular in industrial manufacturing processes, e.g. curing of coatings, forming of plastics, annealing, plastic welding, and print drying. In these applications, infrared heaters replace convection ovens and contact heating.
Cooling
A variety of technologies or proposed technologies take advantage of infrared emissions to cool buildings or other systems. The LWIR (8–15 μm) region is especially useful since some radiation at these wavelengths can escape into space through the atmosphere's infrared window. This is how passive daytime radiative cooling (PDRC) surfaces are able to achieve sub-ambient cooling temperatures under direct solar intensity, enhancing terrestrial heat flow to outer space with zero energy consumption or pollution. PDRC surfaces maximize shortwave solar reflectance to lessen heat gain while maintaining strong longwave infrared (LWIR) thermal radiation heat transfer. When imagined on a worldwide scale, this cooling method has been proposed as a way to slow and even reverse global warming, with some estimates proposing a global surface area coverage of 1-2% to balance global heat fluxes.
Communications
IR data transmission is also employed in short-range communication among computer peripherals and personal digital assistants. These devices usually conform to standards published by IrDA, the Infrared Data Association. Remote controls and IrDA devices use infrared light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to emit infrared radiation that may be concentrated by a lens into a beam that the user aims at the detector. The beam is modulated, i.e. switched on and off, according to a code which the receiver interprets. Usually very near-IR is used (below 800 nm) for practical reasons. This wavelength is efficiently detected by inexpensive silicon photodiodes, which the receiver uses to convert the detected radiation to an electric current. That electrical signal is passed through a high-pass filter which retains the rapid pulsations due to the IR transmitter but filters out slowly changing infrared radiation from ambient light. Infrared communications are useful for indoor use in areas of high population density. IR does not penetrate walls and so does not interfere with other devices in adjoining rooms. Infrared is the most common way for remote controls to command appliances. Infrared remote control protocols like RC-5, , are used to communicate with infrared.
Free-space optical communication using infrared lasers can be a relatively inexpensive way to install a communications link in an urban area operating at up to 4 gigabit/s, compared to the cost of burying fiber optic cable, except for the radiation damage. "Since the eye cannot detect IR, blinking or closing the eyes to help prevent or reduce damage may not happen."
Infrared lasers are used to provide the light for optical fiber communications systems. Wavelengths around 1,330 nm (least dispersion) or 1,550 nm (best transmission) are the best choices for standard silica fibers.
IR data transmission of audio versions of printed signs is being researched as an aid for visually impaired people through the Remote infrared audible signage project. Transmitting IR data from one device to another is sometimes referred to as beaming.
IR is sometimes used for assistive audio as an alternative to an audio induction loop.
Spectroscopy
Infrared vibrational spectroscopy (see also near-infrared spectroscopy) is a technique that can be used to identify molecules by analysis of their constituent bonds. Each chemical bond in a molecule vibrates at a frequency characteristic of that bond. A group of atoms in a molecule (e.g., CH2) may have multiple modes of oscillation caused by the stretching and bending motions of the group as a whole. If an oscillation leads to a change in dipole in the molecule then it will absorb a photon that has the same frequency. The vibrational frequencies of most molecules correspond to the frequencies of infrared light. Typically, the technique is used to study organic compounds using light radiation from the mid-infrared, 4,000–400 cm−1. A spectrum of all the frequencies of absorption in a sample is recorded. This can be used to gain information about the sample composition in terms of chemical groups present and also its purity (for example, a wet sample will show a broad O-H absorption around 3200 cm−1). The unit for expressing radiation in this application, cm−1, is the spectroscopic wavenumber. It is the frequency divided by the speed of light in vacuum.
Thin film metrology
In the semiconductor industry, infrared light can be used to characterize materials such as thin films and periodic trench structures. By measuring the reflectance of light from the surface of a semiconductor wafer, the index of refraction (n) and the extinction Coefficient (k) can be determined via the Forouhi–Bloomer dispersion equations. The reflectance from the infrared light can also be used to determine the critical dimension, depth, and sidewall angle of high aspect ratio trench structures.
Meteorology
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Weather satellites equipped with scanning radiometers produce thermal or infrared images, which can then enable a trained analyst to determine cloud heights and types, to calculate land and surface water temperatures, and to locate ocean surface features. The scanning is typically in the range 10.3–12.5 μm (IR4 and IR5 channels).
Clouds with high and cold tops, such as cyclones or cumulonimbus clouds, are often displayed as red or black, lower warmer clouds such as stratus or stratocumulus are displayed as blue or grey, with intermediate clouds shaded accordingly. Hot land surfaces are shown as dark-grey or black. One disadvantage of infrared imagery is that low clouds such as stratus or fog can have a temperature similar to the surrounding land or sea surface and do not show up. However, using the difference in brightness of the IR4 channel (10.3–11.5 μm) and the near-infrared channel (1.58–1.64 μm), low clouds can be distinguished, producing a fog satellite picture. The main advantage of infrared is that images can be produced at night, allowing a continuous sequence of weather to be studied.
These infrared pictures can depict ocean eddies or vortices and map currents such as the Gulf Stream, which are valuable to the shipping industry. Fishermen and farmers are interested in knowing land and water temperatures to protect their crops against frost or increase their catch from the sea. Even El Niño phenomena can be spotted. Using color-digitized techniques, the gray-shaded thermal images can be converted to color for easier identification of desired information.
The main water vapour channel at 6.40 to 7.08 μm can be imaged by some weather satellites and shows the amount of moisture in the atmosphere.
Climatology
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In the field of climatology, atmospheric infrared radiation is monitored to detect trends in the energy exchange between the Earth and the atmosphere. These trends provide information on long-term changes in Earth's climate. It is one of the primary parameters studied in research into global warming, together with solar radiation.
A pyrgeometer is utilized in this field of research to perform continuous outdoor measurements. This is a broadband infrared radiometer with sensitivity for infrared radiation between approximately 4.5 μm and 50 μm.
Astronomy
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Astronomers observe objects in the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum using optical components, including mirrors, lenses and solid state digital detectors. For this reason it is classified as part of optical astronomy. To form an image, the components of an infrared telescope need to be carefully shielded from heat sources, and the detectors are chilled using liquid helium.
The sensitivity of Earth-based infrared telescopes is significantly limited by water vapor in the atmosphere, which absorbs a portion of the infrared radiation arriving from space outside of selected atmospheric windows. This limitation can be partially alleviated by placing the telescope observatory at a high altitude, or by carrying the telescope aloft with a balloon or an aircraft. Space telescopes do not suffer from this handicap, and so outer space is considered the ideal location for infrared astronomy.
The infrared portion of the spectrum has several useful benefits for astronomers. Cold, dark molecular clouds of gas and dust in our galaxy will glow with radiated heat as they are irradiated by imbedded stars. Infrared can also be used to detect protostars before they begin to emit visible light. Stars emit a smaller portion of their energy in the infrared spectrum, so nearby cool objects such as planets can be more readily detected. (In the visible light spectrum, the glare from the star will drown out the reflected light from a planet.)
Infrared light is also useful for observing the cores of active galaxies, which are often cloaked in gas and dust. Distant galaxies with a high redshift will have the peak portion of their spectrum shifted toward longer wavelengths, so they are more readily observed in the infrared.
Cleaning
Infrared cleaning is a technique used by some motion picture film scanners, film scanners and flatbed scanners to reduce or remove the effect of dust and scratches upon the finished scan. It works by collecting an additional infrared channel from the scan at the same position and resolution as the three visible color channels (red, green, and blue). The infrared channel, in combination with the other channels, is used to detect the location of scratches and dust. Once located, those defects can be corrected by scaling or replaced by inpainting.
Art conservation and analysis
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Infrared reflectography can be applied to paintings to reveal underlying layers in a non-destructive manner, in particular the artist's underdrawing or outline drawn as a guide. Art conservators use the technique to examine how the visible layers of paint differ from the underdrawing or layers in between (such alterations are called pentimenti when made by the original artist). This is very useful information in deciding whether a painting is the prime version by the original artist or a copy, and whether it has been altered by over-enthusiastic restoration work. In general, the more pentimenti, the more likely a painting is to be the prime version. It also gives useful insights into working practices. Reflectography often reveals the artist's use of carbon black, which shows up well in reflectograms, as long as it has not also been used in the ground underlying the whole painting.
Recent progress in the design of infrared-sensitive cameras makes it possible to discover and depict not only underpaintings and pentimenti, but entire paintings that were later overpainted by the artist. Notable examples are Picasso's Woman Ironing and Blue Room, where in both cases a portrait of a man has been made visible under the painting as it is known today.
Similar uses of infrared are made by conservators and scientists on various types of objects, especially very old written documents such as the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Roman works in the Villa of the Papyri, and the Silk Road texts found in the Dunhuang Caves. Carbon black used in ink can show up extremely well.
Biological systems
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The pit viper has a pair of infrared sensory pits on its head. There is uncertainty regarding the exact thermal sensitivity of this biological infrared detection system.
Other organisms that have thermoreceptive organs are pythons (family Pythonidae), some boas (family Boidae), the Common Vampire Bat (Desmodus rotundus), a variety of jewel beetles (Melanophila acuminata), darkly pigmented butterflies (Pachliopta aristolochiae and ), and possibly blood-sucking bugs (Triatoma infestans). By detecting the heat that their prey emits, crotaline and boid snakes identify and capture their prey using their IR-sensitive pit organs. Comparably, IR-sensitive pits on the Common Vampire Bat (Desmodus rotundus) aid in the identification of blood-rich regions on its warm-blooded victim. The jewel beetle, Melanophila acuminata, locates forest fires via infrared pit organs, where on recently burnt trees, they deposit their eggs. Thermoreceptors on the wings and antennae of butterflies with dark pigmentation, such Pachliopta aristolochiae and , shield them from heat damage as they sunbathe in the sun. Additionally, it's hypothesised that thermoreceptors let bloodsucking bugs (Triatoma infestans) locate their warm-blooded victims by sensing their body heat.
Some fungi like Venturia inaequalis require near-infrared light for ejection.
Although near-infrared vision (780–1,000 nm) has long been deemed impossible due to noise in visual pigments, sensation of near-infrared light was reported in the common carp and in three cichlid species. Fish use NIR to capture prey and for phototactic swimming orientation. NIR sensation in fish may be relevant under poor lighting conditions during twilight and in turbid surface waters.
Photobiomodulation
Near-infrared light, or photobiomodulation, is used for treatment of chemotherapy-induced oral ulceration as well as wound healing. There is some work relating to anti-herpes virus treatment. Research projects include work on central nervous system healing effects via cytochrome c oxidase upregulation and other possible mechanisms.
Health hazards
Strong infrared radiation in certain industry high-heat settings may be hazardous to the eyes, resulting in damage or blindness to the user. Since the radiation is invisible, special IR-proof goggles must be worn in such places.
Scientific history
The discovery of infrared radiation is ascribed to William Herschel, the astronomer, in the early 19th century. Herschel published his results in 1800 before the Royal Society of London. Herschel used a prism to refract light from the sun and detected the infrared, beyond the red part of the spectrum, through an increase in the temperature recorded on a thermometer. He was surprised at the result and called them "Calorific Rays". The term "infrared" did not appear until late 19th century. An earlier experiment in 1790 by Marc-Auguste Pictet demonstrated the reflection and focusing of radiant heat via mirrors in the absence of visible light.
Other important dates include:
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHpMek0yTDFkcGJHeHBZVzFmU0dWeWMyTm9aV3d3TVM1cWNHY3ZNVGN3Y0hndFYybHNiR2xoYlY5SVpYSnpZMmhsYkRBeExtcHdadz09LmpwZw==.jpg)
- 1830: Leopoldo Nobili made the first thermopile IR detector.
- 1840: John Herschel produces the first thermal image, called a thermogram.
- 1860: Gustav Kirchhoff formulated the blackbody theorem
.
- 1873: Willoughby Smith discovered the photoconductivity of selenium.
- 1878: Samuel Pierpont Langley invents the first bolometer, a device which is able to measure small temperature fluctuations, and thus the power of far infrared sources.
- 1879: Stefan–Boltzmann law formulated empirically that the power radiated by a blackbody is proportional to T4.
- 1880s and 1890s: Lord Rayleigh and Wilhelm Wien solved part of the blackbody equation, but both solutions diverged in parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. This problem was called the "ultraviolet catastrophe and infrared catastrophe".
- 1892: Willem Henri Julius published infrared spectra of 20 organic compounds measured with a bolometer in units of angular displacement.
- 1901: Max Planck published the blackbody equation and theorem. He solved the problem by quantizing the allowable energy transitions.
- 1905: Albert Einstein developed the theory of the photoelectric effect.
- 1905–1908: William Coblentz published infrared spectra in units of wavelength (micrometers) for several chemical compounds in Investigations of Infra-Red Spectra.
- 1917: Theodore Case developed the thallous sulfide detector, which helped produce the first infrared search and track device able to detect aircraft at a range of one mile (1.6 km).
- 1935: Lead salts – early missile guidance in World War II.
- 1938: predicted that the pyroelectric effect could be used to detect infrared radiation.
- 1945: The Zielgerät 1229 "Vampir" infrared weapon system was introduced as the first portable infrared device for military applications.
- 1952: Heinrich Welker grew synthetic InSb crystals.
- 1950s and 1960s: Nomenclature and radiometric units defined by , and ; Robert Clark Jones defined D*.
- 1958: (Royal Radar Establishment in Malvern) discovered IR detection properties of Mercury cadmium telluride (HgCdTe).
- 1958: Falcon and Sidewinder missiles were developed using infrared technology.
- 1960s: and his colleagues at Honeywell Research Center demonstrate the use of HgCdTe as an effective compound for infrared detection.
- 1962: demonstrated pyroelectric detection.
- 1964: W. G. Evans discovered infrared thermoreceptors in a pyrophile beetle.
- 1965: First IR handbook; first commercial imagers ( (now part of FLIR Systems Inc.)); 's landmark text; F4 TRAM FLIR by Hughes; phenomenology pioneered by and ; U.S. Army's night vision lab formed (now Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate (NVESD)), and develops detection, recognition and identification modeling there.
- 1970: Willard Boyle and George E. Smith proposed CCD at Bell Labs for picture phone.
- 1973: Common module program started by NVESD.
- 1978: Infrared imaging astronomy came of age, observatories planned, IRTF on Mauna Kea opened; 32 × 32 and 64 × 64 arrays produced using InSb, HgCdTe and other materials.
- 2013: On 14 February, researchers developed a neural implant that gives rats the ability to sense infrared light, which for the first time provides living creatures with new abilities, instead of simply replacing or augmenting existing abilities.
See also
- Black-body radiation
- Infrared non-destructive testing of materials
- Infrared solar cells
- Infrared thermometer
- People counter
- Index of infrared articles
Notes
- Temperatures of black bodies for which spectral peaks fall at the given wavelengths, according to the wavelength form of Wien's displacement law.
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By covering the Earth with a small fraction of thermally emitting materials, the heat flow away from the Earth can be increased, and the net radiative flux can be reduced to zero (or even made negative), thus stabilizing (or cooling) the Earth.
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Accordingly, designing and fabricating efficient PDRC with sufficiently high solar reflectance (𝜌¯solar) (λ ~ 0.3–2.5 μm) to minimize solar heat gain and simultaneously strong LWIR thermal emittance (ε¯LWIR) to maximize radiative heat loss is highly desirable. When the incoming radiative heat from the Sun is balanced by the outgoing radiative heat emission, the temperature of the Earth can reach its steady state.
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If only 1%–2% of the Earth's surface were instead made to radiate at this rate rather than its current average value, the total heat fluxes into and away from the entire Earth would be balanced and warming would cease.
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With 100 W/m2 as a demonstrated passive cooling effect, a surface coverage of 0.3% would then be needed, or 1% of Earth's land mass surface. If half of it would be installed in urban, built areas which cover roughly 3% of the Earth's land mass, a 17% coverage would be needed there, with the remainder being installed in rural areas.
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External links
- Infrared: A Historical Perspective Archived 2007-08-07 at the Wayback Machine (Omega Engineering)
- Infrared Data Association Archived 2008-05-22 at the Wayback Machine, a standards organization for infrared data interconnection
- SIRC Protocol Archived 2011-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
- How to build a USB infrared receiver to control PC's remotely Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
- Infrared Waves: detailed explanation of infrared light. (NASA)
- Herschel's original paper from 1800 announcing the discovery of infrared light
- The thermographic's library Archived 2013-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, collection of thermogram
- Infrared reflectography in analysis of paintings Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine at ColourLex
- Molly Faries, Techniques and Applications – Analytical Capabilities of Infrared Reflectography: An Art Historian s Perspective Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine, in Scientific Examination of Art: Modern Techniques in Conservation and Analysis, Sackler NAS Colloquium, 2005
Infrared IR sometimes called infrared light is electromagnetic radiation EMR with wavelengths longer than that of visible light but shorter than microwaves The infrared spectral band begins with waves that are just longer than those of red light the longest waves in the visible spectrum so IR is invisible to the human eye IR is generally understood to include wavelengths from around 750 nm 400 THz to 1 mm 300 GHz IR is commonly divided between longer wavelength thermal IR emitted from terrestrial sources and shorter wavelength IR or near IR part of the solar spectrum Longer IR wavelengths 30 100 mm are sometimes included as part of the terahertz radiation band Almost all black body radiation from objects near room temperature is in the IR band As a form of EMR IR carries energy and momentum exerts radiation pressure and has properties corresponding to both those of a wave and of a particle the photon A false color image of two people taken in long wavelength infrared body temperature thermal radiationThis pseudocolor infrared space telescope image has blue green and red corresponding to wavelengths of 3 4 4 6 and 12 mm respectively It was long known that fires emit invisible heat in 1681 the pioneering experimenter Edme Mariotte showed that glass though transparent to sunlight obstructed radiant heat In 1800 the astronomer Sir William Herschel discovered that infrared radiation is a type of invisible radiation in the spectrum lower in energy than red light by means of its effect on a thermometer Slightly more than half of the energy from the Sun was eventually found through Herschel s studies to arrive on Earth in the form of infrared The balance between absorbed and emitted infrared radiation has an important effect on Earth s climate Infrared radiation is emitted or absorbed by molecules when changing rotational vibrational movements It excites vibrational modes in a molecule through a change in the dipole moment making it a useful frequency range for study of these energy states for molecules of the proper symmetry Infrared spectroscopy examines absorption and transmission of photons in the infrared range Infrared radiation is used in industrial scientific military commercial and medical applications Night vision devices using active near infrared illumination allow people or animals to be observed without the observer being detected Infrared astronomy uses sensor equipped telescopes to penetrate dusty regions of space such as molecular clouds to detect objects such as planets and to view highly red shifted objects from the early days of the universe Infrared thermal imaging cameras are used to detect heat loss in insulated systems to observe changing blood flow in the skin to assist firefighting and to detect the overheating of electrical components Military and civilian applications include target acquisition surveillance night vision homing and tracking Humans at normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 mm Non military uses include thermal efficiency analysis environmental monitoring industrial facility inspections detection of grow ops remote temperature sensing short range wireless communication spectroscopy and weather forecasting Definition and relationship to the electromagnetic spectrumThere is no universally accepted definition of the range of infrared radiation Typically it is taken to extend from the nominal red edge of the visible spectrum at 780 nm to 1 mm This range of wavelengths corresponds to a frequency range of approximately 430 THz down to 300 GHz Beyond infrared is the microwave portion of the electromagnetic spectrum Increasingly terahertz radiation is counted as part of the microwave band not infrared moving the band edge of infrared to 0 1 mm 3 THz Position in the electromagnetic spectrum Name Wavelength Frequency Hz Photon energy eV Gamma ray less than 10 pm more than 30 EHz more than 124 keVX ray 10 pm 10 nm 30 PHz 30 EHz 124 keV 124 eVUltraviolet 10 nm 400 nm 750 THz 30 PHz 124 eV 3 3 eVVisible 400 nm 700 nm 430 THz 750 THz 3 3 eV 1 7 eVInfrared 700 nm 1 mm 300 GHz 430 THz 1 7 eV 1 24 meVMicrowave 1 mm 1 meter 300 MHz 300 GHz 1 24 meV 1 24 meVRadio 1 meter and more 300 MHz and below 1 24 meV and belowNatureSunlight at an effective temperature of 5 780 K 5 510 C 9 940 F is composed of near thermal spectrum radiation that is slightly more than half infrared At zenith sunlight provides an irradiance of just over 1 kW per square meter at sea level Of this energy 527 W is infrared radiation 445 W is visible light and 32 W is ultraviolet radiation Nearly all the infrared radiation in sunlight is near infrared shorter than 4 mm On the surface of Earth at far lower temperatures than the surface of the Sun some thermal radiation consists of infrared in the mid infrared region much longer than in sunlight Black body or thermal radiation is continuous it radiates at all wavelengths Of these natural thermal radiation processes only lightning and natural fires are hot enough to produce much visible energy and fires produce far more infrared than visible light energy RegionsIn general objects emit infrared radiation across a spectrum of wavelengths but sometimes only a limited region of the spectrum is of interest because sensors usually collect radiation only within a specific bandwidth Thermal infrared radiation also has a maximum emission wavelength which is inversely proportional to the absolute temperature of object in accordance with Wien s displacement law The infrared band is often subdivided into smaller sections although how the IR spectrum is thereby divided varies between different areas in which IR is employed Visible limit Infrared radiation is generally considered to begin with wavelengths longer than visible by the human eye There is no hard wavelength limit to what is visible as the eye s sensitivity decreases rapidly but smoothly for wavelengths exceeding about 700 nm Therefore wavelengths just longer than that can be seen if they are sufficiently bright though they may still be classified as infrared according to usual definitions Light from a near IR laser may thus appear dim red and can present a hazard since it may actually be quite bright Even IR at wavelengths up to 1 050 nm from pulsed lasers can be seen by humans under certain conditions Commonly used subdivision scheme A commonly used subdivision scheme is Division name Abbreviation Wavelength Frequency Photon energy Temperature CharacteristicsNear infrared NIR IR A DIN 0 75 1 4 mm 214 400 THz 886 1 653 meV 3 864 2 070 K 3 591 1 797 C Goes up to the wavelength of the first water absorption band and commonly used in fiber optic telecommunication because of low attenuation losses in the SiO2 glass silica medium Image intensifiers are sensitive to this area of the spectrum examples include night vision devices such as night vision goggles Near infrared spectroscopy is another common application Short wavelength infrared SWIR IR B DIN 1 4 3 mm 100 214 THz 413 886 meV 2 070 966 K 1 797 693 C Water absorption increases significantly at 1 450 nm The 1 530 to 1 560 nm range is the dominant spectral region for long distance telecommunications see transmission windows Mid wavelength infrared MWIR IR C DIN MidIR Also called intermediate infrared IIR 3 8 mm 37 100 THz 155 413 meV 966 362 K 693 89 C In guided missile technology the 3 5 mm portion of this band is the atmospheric window in which the seekers of passive IR heat seeking missiles are designed to work homing on to the infrared signature of the target aircraft typically the jet engine exhaust plume This region is also known as thermal infrared Long wavelength infrared LWIR IR C DIN 8 15 mm 20 37 THz 83 155 meV 362 193 K 89 80 C The thermal imaging region in which sensors can obtain a completely passive image of objects only slightly higher in temperature than room temperature for example the human body based on thermal emissions only and requiring no illumination such as the sun or moon or an infrared illuminator This region is also called the thermal infrared Far infrared FIR 15 1 000 mm 0 3 20 THz 1 2 83 meV 193 3 K 80 15 270 15 C see also far infrared laser and far infrared A comparison of a thermal image top and an ordinary photograph bottom The plastic bag is mostly transparent to long wavelength infrared but the man s glasses are opaque NIR and SWIR together is sometimes called reflected infrared whereas MWIR and LWIR is sometimes referred to as thermal infrared CIE division scheme The International Commission on Illumination CIE recommended the division of infrared radiation into the following three bands Abbreviation Wavelength FrequencyIR A 780 1400 nm 215 384 THzIR B 1400 3000 nm 100 215 THzIR C 3 1000 mm 0 3 100 THzISO 20473 scheme ISO 20473 specifies the following scheme Designation Abbreviation WavelengthNear infrared NIR 0 78 3 mmMid infrared MIR 3 50 mmFar infrared FIR 50 1 000 mmAstronomy division scheme Astronomers typically divide the infrared spectrum as follows Designation Abbreviation WavelengthNear infrared NIR 0 7 2 5 mmMid infrared MIR 3 25 mmFar infrared FIR above 25 mm These divisions are not precise and can vary depending on the publication The three regions are used for observation of different temperature ranges and hence different environments in space The most common photometric system used in astronomy allocates capital letters to different spectral regions according to filters used I J H and K cover the near infrared wavelengths L M N and Q refer to the mid infrared region These letters are commonly understood in reference to atmospheric windows and appear for instance in the titles of many papers Sensor response division scheme Plot of atmospheric transmittance in part of the infrared region A third scheme divides up the band based on the response of various detectors Near infrared from 0 7 to 1 0 mm from the approximate end of the response of the human eye to that of silicon Short wave infrared 1 0 to 3 mm from the cut off of silicon to that of the MWIR atmospheric window InGaAs covers to about 1 8 mm the less sensitive lead salts cover this region Cryogenically cooled MCT detectors can cover the region of 1 0 2 5 mm Mid wave infrared 3 to 5 mm defined by the atmospheric window and covered by indium antimonide InSb and mercury cadmium telluride HgCdTe and partially by lead selenide PbSe Long wave infrared 8 to 12 or 7 to 14 mm this is the atmospheric window covered by HgCdTe and microbolometers Very long wave infrared VLWIR 12 to about 30 mm covered by doped silicon Near infrared is the region closest in wavelength to the radiation detectable by the human eye mid and far infrared are progressively further from the visible spectrum Other definitions follow different physical mechanisms emission peaks vs bands water absorption and the newest follow technical reasons the common silicon detectors are sensitive to about 1 050 nm while InGaAs s sensitivity starts around 950 nm and ends between 1 700 and 2 600 nm depending on the specific configuration No international standards for these specifications are currently available The onset of infrared is defined according to different standards at various values typically between 700 nm and 800 nm but the boundary between visible and infrared light is not precisely defined The human eye is markedly less sensitive to light above 700 nm wavelength so longer wavelengths make insignificant contributions to scenes illuminated by common light sources Particularly intense near IR light e g from lasers LEDs or bright daylight with the visible light filtered out can be detected up to approximately 780 nm and will be perceived as red light Intense light sources providing wavelengths as long as 1 050 nm can be seen as a dull red glow causing some difficulty in near IR illumination of scenes in the dark usually this practical problem is solved by indirect illumination Leaves are particularly bright in the near IR and if all visible light leaks from around an IR filter are blocked and the eye is given a moment to adjust to the extremely dim image coming through a visually opaque IR passing photographic filter it is possible to see the Wood effect that consists of IR glowing foliage Telecommunication bands In optical communications the part of the infrared spectrum that is used is divided into seven bands based on availability of light sources transmitting absorbing materials fibers and detectors Band Descriptor Wavelength rangeO band Original 1 260 1 360 nmE band Extended 1 360 1 460 nmS band Short wavelength 1 460 1 530 nmC band Conventional 1 530 1 565 nmL band Long wavelength 1 565 1 625 nmU band Ultralong wavelength 1 625 1 675 nm The C band is the dominant band for long distance telecommunications networks The S and L bands are based on less well established technology and are not as widely deployed HeatMaterials with higher emissivity appear closer to their true temperature than materials that reflect more of their different temperature surroundings In this thermal image the more reflective ceramic cylinder reflecting the cooler surroundings appears to be colder than its cubic container made of more emissive silicon carbide while in fact they have the same temperature Infrared radiation is popularly known as heat radiation but light and electromagnetic waves of any frequency will heat surfaces that absorb them Infrared light from the Sun accounts for 49 of the heating of Earth with the rest being caused by visible light that is absorbed then re radiated at longer wavelengths Visible light or ultraviolet emitting lasers can char paper and incandescently hot objects emit visible radiation Objects at room temperature will emit radiation concentrated mostly in the 8 to 25 mm band but this is not distinct from the emission of visible light by incandescent objects and ultraviolet by even hotter objects see black body and Wien s displacement law Heat is energy in transit that flows due to a temperature difference Unlike heat transmitted by thermal conduction or thermal convection thermal radiation can propagate through a vacuum Thermal radiation is characterized by a particular spectrum of many wavelengths that are associated with emission from an object due to the vibration of its molecules at a given temperature Thermal radiation can be emitted from objects at any wavelength and at very high temperatures such radiation is associated with spectra far above the infrared extending into visible ultraviolet and even X ray regions e g the solar corona Thus the popular association of infrared radiation with thermal radiation is only a coincidence based on typical comparatively low temperatures often found near the surface of planet Earth The concept of emissivity is important in understanding the infrared emissions of objects This is a property of a surface that describes how its thermal emissions deviate from the ideal of a black body To further explain two objects at the same physical temperature may not show the same infrared image if they have differing emissivity For example for any pre set emissivity value objects with higher emissivity will appear hotter and those with a lower emissivity will appear cooler assuming as is often the case that the surrounding environment is cooler than the objects being viewed When an object has less than perfect emissivity it obtains properties of reflectivity and or transparency and so the temperature of the surrounding environment is partially reflected by and or transmitted through the object If the object were in a hotter environment then a lower emissivity object at the same temperature would likely appear to be hotter than a more emissive one For that reason incorrect selection of emissivity and not accounting for environmental temperatures will give inaccurate results when using infrared cameras and pyrometers ApplicationsNight vision Active infrared night vision the camera illuminates the scene at infrared wavelengths invisible to the human eye Despite a dark back lit scene active infrared night vision delivers identifying details as seen on the display monitor Infrared is used in night vision equipment when there is insufficient visible light to see Night vision devices operate through a process involving the conversion of ambient light photons into electrons that are then amplified by a chemical and electrical process and then converted back into visible light Infrared light sources can be used to augment the available ambient light for conversion by night vision devices increasing in the dark visibility without actually using a visible light source The use of infrared light and night vision devices should not be confused with thermal imaging which creates images based on differences in surface temperature by detecting infrared radiation heat that emanates from objects and their surrounding environment Thermography Thermography helped to determine the temperature profile of the Space Shuttle thermal protection system during re entry Infrared radiation can be used to remotely determine the temperature of objects if the emissivity is known This is termed thermography or in the case of very hot objects in the NIR or visible it is termed pyrometry Thermography thermal imaging is mainly used in military and industrial applications but the technology is reaching the public market in the form of infrared cameras on cars due to greatly reduced production costs Thermographic cameras detect radiation in the infrared range of the electromagnetic spectrum roughly 9 000 14 000 nm or 9 14 mm and produce images of that radiation Since infrared radiation is emitted by all objects based on their temperatures according to the black body radiation law thermography makes it possible to see one s environment with or without visible illumination The amount of radiation emitted by an object increases with temperature therefore thermography allows one to see variations in temperature hence the name Hyperspectral imaging Hyperspectral thermal infrared emission measurement an outdoor scan in winter conditions ambient temperature 15 C image produced with a Specim LWIR hyperspectral imager Relative radiance spectra from various targets in the image are shown with arrows The infrared spectra of the different objects such as the watch clasp have clearly distinctive characteristics The contrast level indicates the temperature of the object Infrared light from the LED of a remote control as recorded by a digital camera A hyperspectral image is a picture containing continuous spectrum through a wide spectral range at each pixel Hyperspectral imaging is gaining importance in the field of applied spectroscopy particularly with NIR SWIR MWIR and LWIR spectral regions Typical applications include biological mineralogical defence and industrial measurements Thermal infrared hyperspectral imaging can be similarly performed using a thermographic camera with the fundamental difference that each pixel contains a full LWIR spectrum Consequently chemical identification of the object can be performed without a need for an external light source such as the Sun or the Moon Such cameras are typically applied for geological measurements outdoor surveillance and UAV applications Other imaging In infrared photography infrared filters are used to capture the near infrared spectrum Digital cameras often use infrared blockers Cheaper digital cameras and camera phones have less effective filters and can view intense near infrared appearing as a bright purple white color This is especially pronounced when taking pictures of subjects near IR bright areas such as near a lamp where the resulting infrared interference can wash out the image There is also a technique called T ray imaging which is imaging using far infrared or terahertz radiation Lack of bright sources can make terahertz photography more challenging than most other infrared imaging techniques Recently T ray imaging has been of considerable interest due to a number of new developments such as terahertz time domain spectroscopy Reflected light photograph in various infrared spectra to illustrate the appearance as the wavelength of light changesTracking Infrared tracking also known as infrared homing refers to a passive missile guidance system which uses the emission from a target of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared part of the spectrum to track it Missiles that use infrared seeking are often referred to as heat seekers since infrared IR is just below the visible spectrum of light in frequency and is radiated strongly by hot bodies Many objects such as people vehicle engines and aircraft generate and retain heat and as such are especially visible in the infrared wavelengths of light compared to objects in the background Heating Infrared hair dryer for hair salons c 2010s Infrared radiation can be used as a deliberate heating source For example it is used in infrared saunas to heat the occupants It may also be used in other heating applications such as to remove ice from the wings of aircraft de icing Infrared heating is also becoming more popular in industrial manufacturing processes e g curing of coatings forming of plastics annealing plastic welding and print drying In these applications infrared heaters replace convection ovens and contact heating Cooling A variety of technologies or proposed technologies take advantage of infrared emissions to cool buildings or other systems The LWIR 8 15 mm region is especially useful since some radiation at these wavelengths can escape into space through the atmosphere s infrared window This is how passive daytime radiative cooling PDRC surfaces are able to achieve sub ambient cooling temperatures under direct solar intensity enhancing terrestrial heat flow to outer space with zero energy consumption or pollution PDRC surfaces maximize shortwave solar reflectance to lessen heat gain while maintaining strong longwave infrared LWIR thermal radiation heat transfer When imagined on a worldwide scale this cooling method has been proposed as a way to slow and even reverse global warming with some estimates proposing a global surface area coverage of 1 2 to balance global heat fluxes Communications IR data transmission is also employed in short range communication among computer peripherals and personal digital assistants These devices usually conform to standards published by IrDA the Infrared Data Association Remote controls and IrDA devices use infrared light emitting diodes LEDs to emit infrared radiation that may be concentrated by a lens into a beam that the user aims at the detector The beam is modulated i e switched on and off according to a code which the receiver interprets Usually very near IR is used below 800 nm for practical reasons This wavelength is efficiently detected by inexpensive silicon photodiodes which the receiver uses to convert the detected radiation to an electric current That electrical signal is passed through a high pass filter which retains the rapid pulsations due to the IR transmitter but filters out slowly changing infrared radiation from ambient light Infrared communications are useful for indoor use in areas of high population density IR does not penetrate walls and so does not interfere with other devices in adjoining rooms Infrared is the most common way for remote controls to command appliances Infrared remote control protocols like RC 5 are used to communicate with infrared Free space optical communication using infrared lasers can be a relatively inexpensive way to install a communications link in an urban area operating at up to 4 gigabit s compared to the cost of burying fiber optic cable except for the radiation damage Since the eye cannot detect IR blinking or closing the eyes to help prevent or reduce damage may not happen Infrared lasers are used to provide the light for optical fiber communications systems Wavelengths around 1 330 nm least dispersion or 1 550 nm best transmission are the best choices for standard silica fibers IR data transmission of audio versions of printed signs is being researched as an aid for visually impaired people through the Remote infrared audible signage project Transmitting IR data from one device to another is sometimes referred to as beaming IR is sometimes used for assistive audio as an alternative to an audio induction loop Spectroscopy Infrared vibrational spectroscopy see also near infrared spectroscopy is a technique that can be used to identify molecules by analysis of their constituent bonds Each chemical bond in a molecule vibrates at a frequency characteristic of that bond A group of atoms in a molecule e g CH2 may have multiple modes of oscillation caused by the stretching and bending motions of the group as a whole If an oscillation leads to a change in dipole in the molecule then it will absorb a photon that has the same frequency The vibrational frequencies of most molecules correspond to the frequencies of infrared light Typically the technique is used to study organic compounds using light radiation from the mid infrared 4 000 400 cm 1 A spectrum of all the frequencies of absorption in a sample is recorded This can be used to gain information about the sample composition in terms of chemical groups present and also its purity for example a wet sample will show a broad O H absorption around 3200 cm 1 The unit for expressing radiation in this application cm 1 is the spectroscopic wavenumber It is the frequency divided by the speed of light in vacuum Thin film metrology In the semiconductor industry infrared light can be used to characterize materials such as thin films and periodic trench structures By measuring the reflectance of light from the surface of a semiconductor wafer the index of refraction n and the extinction Coefficient k can be determined via the Forouhi Bloomer dispersion equations The reflectance from the infrared light can also be used to determine the critical dimension depth and sidewall angle of high aspect ratio trench structures Meteorology IR satellite picture of cumulonimbus clouds over the Great Plains of the United States Weather satellites equipped with scanning radiometers produce thermal or infrared images which can then enable a trained analyst to determine cloud heights and types to calculate land and surface water temperatures and to locate ocean surface features The scanning is typically in the range 10 3 12 5 mm IR4 and IR5 channels Clouds with high and cold tops such as cyclones or cumulonimbus clouds are often displayed as red or black lower warmer clouds such as stratus or stratocumulus are displayed as blue or grey with intermediate clouds shaded accordingly Hot land surfaces are shown as dark grey or black One disadvantage of infrared imagery is that low clouds such as stratus or fog can have a temperature similar to the surrounding land or sea surface and do not show up However using the difference in brightness of the IR4 channel 10 3 11 5 mm and the near infrared channel 1 58 1 64 mm low clouds can be distinguished producing a fog satellite picture The main advantage of infrared is that images can be produced at night allowing a continuous sequence of weather to be studied These infrared pictures can depict ocean eddies or vortices and map currents such as the Gulf Stream which are valuable to the shipping industry Fishermen and farmers are interested in knowing land and water temperatures to protect their crops against frost or increase their catch from the sea Even El Nino phenomena can be spotted Using color digitized techniques the gray shaded thermal images can be converted to color for easier identification of desired information The main water vapour channel at 6 40 to 7 08 mm can be imaged by some weather satellites and shows the amount of moisture in the atmosphere Climatology The greenhouse effect with molecules of methane water and carbon dioxide re radiating solar heat In the field of climatology atmospheric infrared radiation is monitored to detect trends in the energy exchange between the Earth and the atmosphere These trends provide information on long term changes in Earth s climate It is one of the primary parameters studied in research into global warming together with solar radiation A pyrgeometer is utilized in this field of research to perform continuous outdoor measurements This is a broadband infrared radiometer with sensitivity for infrared radiation between approximately 4 5 mm and 50 mm Astronomy Beta Pictoris with its planet Beta Pictoris b the light blue dot off center as seen in infrared It combines two images the inner disc is at 3 6 mm Astronomers observe objects in the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum using optical components including mirrors lenses and solid state digital detectors For this reason it is classified as part of optical astronomy To form an image the components of an infrared telescope need to be carefully shielded from heat sources and the detectors are chilled using liquid helium The sensitivity of Earth based infrared telescopes is significantly limited by water vapor in the atmosphere which absorbs a portion of the infrared radiation arriving from space outside of selected atmospheric windows This limitation can be partially alleviated by placing the telescope observatory at a high altitude or by carrying the telescope aloft with a balloon or an aircraft Space telescopes do not suffer from this handicap and so outer space is considered the ideal location for infrared astronomy The infrared portion of the spectrum has several useful benefits for astronomers Cold dark molecular clouds of gas and dust in our galaxy will glow with radiated heat as they are irradiated by imbedded stars Infrared can also be used to detect protostars before they begin to emit visible light Stars emit a smaller portion of their energy in the infrared spectrum so nearby cool objects such as planets can be more readily detected In the visible light spectrum the glare from the star will drown out the reflected light from a planet Infrared light is also useful for observing the cores of active galaxies which are often cloaked in gas and dust Distant galaxies with a high redshift will have the peak portion of their spectrum shifted toward longer wavelengths so they are more readily observed in the infrared Cleaning Infrared cleaning is a technique used by some motion picture film scanners film scanners and flatbed scanners to reduce or remove the effect of dust and scratches upon the finished scan It works by collecting an additional infrared channel from the scan at the same position and resolution as the three visible color channels red green and blue The infrared channel in combination with the other channels is used to detect the location of scratches and dust Once located those defects can be corrected by scaling or replaced by inpainting Art conservation and analysis An infrared reflectogram of Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci Infrared reflectography can be applied to paintings to reveal underlying layers in a non destructive manner in particular the artist s underdrawing or outline drawn as a guide Art conservators use the technique to examine how the visible layers of paint differ from the underdrawing or layers in between such alterations are called pentimenti when made by the original artist This is very useful information in deciding whether a painting is the prime version by the original artist or a copy and whether it has been altered by over enthusiastic restoration work In general the more pentimenti the more likely a painting is to be the prime version It also gives useful insights into working practices Reflectography often reveals the artist s use of carbon black which shows up well in reflectograms as long as it has not also been used in the ground underlying the whole painting Recent progress in the design of infrared sensitive cameras makes it possible to discover and depict not only underpaintings and pentimenti but entire paintings that were later overpainted by the artist Notable examples are Picasso s Woman Ironing and Blue Room where in both cases a portrait of a man has been made visible under the painting as it is known today Similar uses of infrared are made by conservators and scientists on various types of objects especially very old written documents such as the Dead Sea Scrolls the Roman works in the Villa of the Papyri and the Silk Road texts found in the Dunhuang Caves Carbon black used in ink can show up extremely well Biological systems Thermographic image of a snake eating a mouse The pit viper has a pair of infrared sensory pits on its head There is uncertainty regarding the exact thermal sensitivity of this biological infrared detection system Other organisms that have thermoreceptive organs are pythons family Pythonidae some boas family Boidae the Common Vampire Bat Desmodus rotundus a variety of jewel beetles Melanophila acuminata darkly pigmented butterflies Pachliopta aristolochiae and and possibly blood sucking bugs Triatoma infestans By detecting the heat that their prey emits crotaline and boid snakes identify and capture their prey using their IR sensitive pit organs Comparably IR sensitive pits on the Common Vampire Bat Desmodus rotundus aid in the identification of blood rich regions on its warm blooded victim The jewel beetle Melanophila acuminata locates forest fires via infrared pit organs where on recently burnt trees they deposit their eggs Thermoreceptors on the wings and antennae of butterflies with dark pigmentation such Pachliopta aristolochiae and shield them from heat damage as they sunbathe in the sun Additionally it s hypothesised that thermoreceptors let bloodsucking bugs Triatoma infestans locate their warm blooded victims by sensing their body heat Some fungi like Venturia inaequalis require near infrared light for ejection Although near infrared vision 780 1 000 nm has long been deemed impossible due to noise in visual pigments sensation of near infrared light was reported in the common carp and in three cichlid species Fish use NIR to capture prey and for phototactic swimming orientation NIR sensation in fish may be relevant under poor lighting conditions during twilight and in turbid surface waters Photobiomodulation Near infrared light or photobiomodulation is used for treatment of chemotherapy induced oral ulceration as well as wound healing There is some work relating to anti herpes virus treatment Research projects include work on central nervous system healing effects via cytochrome c oxidase upregulation and other possible mechanisms Health hazards Strong infrared radiation in certain industry high heat settings may be hazardous to the eyes resulting in damage or blindness to the user Since the radiation is invisible special IR proof goggles must be worn in such places Scientific historyThe discovery of infrared radiation is ascribed to William Herschel the astronomer in the early 19th century Herschel published his results in 1800 before the Royal Society of London Herschel used a prism to refract light from the sun and detected the infrared beyond the red part of the spectrum through an increase in the temperature recorded on a thermometer He was surprised at the result and called them Calorific Rays The term infrared did not appear until late 19th century An earlier experiment in 1790 by Marc Auguste Pictet demonstrated the reflection and focusing of radiant heat via mirrors in the absence of visible light Other important dates include Infrared radiation was discovered in 1800 by William Herschel 1830 Leopoldo Nobili made the first thermopile IR detector 1840 John Herschel produces the first thermal image called a thermogram 1860 Gustav Kirchhoff formulated the blackbody theorem E J T n displaystyle E J T n 1873 Willoughby Smith discovered the photoconductivity of selenium 1878 Samuel Pierpont Langley invents the first bolometer a device which is able to measure small temperature fluctuations and thus the power of far infrared sources 1879 Stefan Boltzmann law formulated empirically that the power radiated by a blackbody is proportional to T4 1880s and 1890s Lord Rayleigh and Wilhelm Wien solved part of the blackbody equation but both solutions diverged in parts of the electromagnetic spectrum This problem was called the ultraviolet catastrophe and infrared catastrophe 1892 Willem Henri Julius published infrared spectra of 20 organic compounds measured with a bolometer in units of angular displacement 1901 Max Planck published the blackbody equation and theorem He solved the problem by quantizing the allowable energy transitions 1905 Albert Einstein developed the theory of the photoelectric effect 1905 1908 William Coblentz published infrared spectra in units of wavelength micrometers for several chemical compounds in Investigations of Infra Red Spectra 1917 Theodore Case developed the thallous sulfide detector which helped produce the first infrared search and track device able to detect aircraft at a range of one mile 1 6 km 1935 Lead salts early missile guidance in World War II 1938 predicted that the pyroelectric effect could be used to detect infrared radiation 1945 The Zielgerat 1229 Vampir infrared weapon system was introduced as the first portable infrared device for military applications 1952 Heinrich Welker grew synthetic InSb crystals 1950s and 1960s Nomenclature and radiometric units defined by and Robert Clark Jones defined D 1958 Royal Radar Establishment in Malvern discovered IR detection properties of Mercury cadmium telluride HgCdTe 1958 Falcon and Sidewinder missiles were developed using infrared technology 1960s and his colleagues at Honeywell Research Center demonstrate the use of HgCdTe as an effective compound for infrared detection 1962 demonstrated pyroelectric detection 1964 W G Evans discovered infrared thermoreceptors in a pyrophile beetle 1965 First IR handbook first commercial imagers now part of FLIR Systems Inc s landmark text F4 TRAM FLIR by Hughes phenomenology pioneered by and U S Army s night vision lab formed now Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate NVESD and develops detection recognition and identification modeling there 1970 Willard Boyle and George E Smith proposed CCD at Bell Labs for picture phone 1973 Common module program started by NVESD 1978 Infrared imaging astronomy came of age observatories planned IRTF on Mauna Kea opened 32 32 and 64 64 arrays produced using InSb HgCdTe and other materials 2013 On 14 February researchers developed a neural implant that gives rats the ability to sense infrared light which for the first time provides living creatures with new abilities instead of simply replacing or augmenting existing abilities See alsoBlack body radiation Infrared non destructive testing of materials Infrared solar cells Infrared 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other substances both metallic and nonmetallic and on some photographic processes Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 130 1 59 Bibcode 1840RSPT 130 1H doi 10 1098 rstl 1840 0002 S2CID 98119765 Archived from the original on 2021 02 05 Retrieved 2018 04 09 The term thermograph is coined on p 51 I have discovered a process by which the calorific rays in the solar spectrum are made to leave their impress on a surface properly prepared for the purpose so as to form what may be called a thermograph of the spectrum See Kirchhoff 1859 Ueber den Zusammenhang von Emission und Absorption von Licht und Warme On the relation between emission and absorption of light and heat Monatsberichte der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin Monthly Reports of the Royal Prussian Academy of Philosophy in Berlin in German 783 787 Archived from the original on 2020 09 25 Retrieved 2018 04 10 Kirchhoff G 1860 Ueber das Verhaltnis zwischen dem Emissionsvermogen und dem 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der Energieverteilung im Normalspectrum On the law of energy distribution in the normal spectrum Annalen der Physik 4th series in German 4 3 553 563 Bibcode 1901AnP 309 553P doi 10 1002 andp 19013090310 Archived from the original on 2021 02 06 Retrieved 2018 04 10 See Einstein A 1905 Uber einen die Erzeugung und Verwandlung des Lichtes betreffenden heuristischen Gesichtspunkt On heuristic viewpoint concerning the production and transformation of light Annalen der Physik 4th series in German 17 6 132 148 Bibcode 1905AnP 322 132E doi 10 1002 andp 19053220607 English translation Arons A B Peppard M B 1965 Einstein s proposal of the photon concept a translation of the Annalen der Physik paper of 1905 American Journal of Physics 33 5 367 374 Bibcode 1965AmJPh 33 367A doi 10 1119 1 1971542 S2CID 27091754 Available at Wayback Machine Coblentz William Weber 1905 Investigations of Infra red Spectra Part I II Carnegie institution of Washington Archived from the original on 2024 09 22 Retrieved 2020 10 18 Coblentz William Weber 1905 Investigations of Infra red Spectra Part III IV University of Michigan Washington D C Carnegie institution of Washington Coblentz William Weber August 1905 Investigations of Infra red Spectra Part V VI VII University of California Libraries Washington D C Carnegie Institution of Washington Waste Energy Harvesting Mechanical and Thermal Energies Springer Science amp Business Media 2014 p 406 ISBN 978 3 642 54634 1 Archived from the original on 2024 09 22 Retrieved 2020 01 07 Marion B Reine 2015 Interview with Paul W Kruse on the Early History of HgCdTe 1980 PDF Journal of Electronic Materials 44 9 doi 10 1007 s11664 015 3737 1 S2CID 95341284 Archived PDF from the original on 2020 07 30 Retrieved 2020 01 07 J Cooper 1962 A fast response pyroelectric thermal detector Journal of Scientific Instruments 39 9 467 472 Bibcode 1962JScI 39 467C doi 10 1088 0950 7671 39 9 308 History of Army Night Vision C5ISR Center Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved 2020 01 07 Implant gives rats sixth sense for infrared light Wired UK 14 February 2013 Archived from the original on 17 February 2013 Retrieved 14 February 2013 External linksInfrared at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from WiktionaryMedia from CommonsNews from WikinewsTexts from WikisourceTextbooks from WikibooksResources from Wikiversity Infrared A Historical Perspective Archived 2007 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Omega Engineering Infrared Data Association Archived 2008 05 22 at the Wayback Machine a standards organization for infrared data interconnection SIRC Protocol Archived 2011 10 13 at the Wayback Machine How to build a USB infrared receiver to control PC s remotely Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Infrared Waves detailed explanation of infrared light NASA Herschel s original paper from 1800 announcing the discovery of infrared light The thermographic s library Archived 2013 06 11 at the Wayback Machine collection of thermogram Infrared reflectography in analysis of paintings Archived 2015 12 22 at the Wayback Machine at ColourLex Molly Faries Techniques and Applications Analytical Capabilities of Infrared Reflectography An Art Historian s Perspective Archived 2015 12 22 at the Wayback Machine in Scientific Examination of Art Modern Techniques in Conservation and Analysis Sackler NAS Colloquium 2005