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Re: [OM] Re Infrared images/OT infra red sensors

Subject: Re: [OM] Re Infrared images/OT infra red sensors
From: HI100@xxxxxxx
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 05:52:21 EDT
imagopus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:

<< But back to IR film: do we agree that it is temperature difference, 
 manifested as a difference in radiation wavelengths, that gives IR 
 film (or the near-IR consumer films) their distinctive sensitivity? 
 ..... or am I still way off the mark? 
>>
Chris,
     My understanding is the IR film is only sensitive to very near infra red 
wavelengths just outside the visible range in the region of 700nM (0.7uM) or 
so. A black body radiator radiates almost no energy at these wavelengths 
until the temperature gets pretty high so the film can only detect 
temperature of pretty hot things like a cigarette. Otherwise what it detects 
is reflected energy from other hot sources like the sun. You can think of it 
this way : to detect low temperatures just above room temperature you need to 
detect wavelengths in the region of 8uM, that is more than ten times longer 
wavelengths than where the film is sensitive.  At high temperatures (1000's 
C) the peak emission wavelength moves down to the 1uM - 2uM region and then 
there is enough emission at visible and near IR for the film to work. (The 
Physicists will describe this in terms of Planck's law, Stefan-Boltzman law 
etc which describes radiation energy distribution with wavelength) .  The 
hotter the radiator the higher the "tail" radiation in the visible spectrum 
and near IR. (compare a 3500 deg Kelvin projector lamp to a 2800K normal room 
lamp). Adding a red filter then emphasises the near IR over the visible. 

          Usually the IR detectors used for high temperatures are chosen to 
be sensitive to shorter wavelengths than the 8uM used for low temperatures 
because both the detector sensitivity and the energy emitted can be many 
orders of magnitude better at those wavelengths. There are a variety of 
semiconductor detectors that are used, some using exotic materials and these 
are what are probably used in the weapon systems you are familiar with. 
Silicon photocells (without the filters used for camera cells) will work 
quite well at near IR wavelengths up to  950nM or so. Glass lenses of course 
filter out long IR wavelengths so that even if the film worked for much 
longer wavelengths and the other problems of storage etc were overcome the 
lenses would be opaque and not work. 
    
       Regards,
       Tim Hughes
       >>hi100@xxxxxxx<<

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