| Infrared light is even used to heat food
sometimes - special lamps that emit thermal
infrared waves are often used in fast food
restaurants!
|
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. |
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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 light
but it does emit infrared radiation which we
feel as heat. The warmer the object, the
more infrared radiation it emits.
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Humans, at normal body temperature,
radiate most strongly in the
infrared at a wavelength of about 10
microns. (A micron is the term
commonly used in astronomy for a
micrometer or one millionth of a
meter.) This image ( which is
courtesy of the Infrared Processing
and Analysis Center at CalTech),
shows a man holding up a lighted
match! Which parts of this image do
you think have the warmest
temperature? How does the
temperature of this man's glasses
compare to the temperature of his
hand? |
|

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To
make infrared pictures like the one
above, we can 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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Humans may not be able to
see infrared light, but did you know that
snakes in the pit viper family, like
rattlesnakes, have sensory "pits", which are
used to image infrared light? This allows
the snake to detect warm blooded animals,
even in dark burrows! Snakes with 2 sensory
pits are even thought to have some depth
perception in the infrared! (Thanks to
NASA's Infrared Processing and Analysis
Center for help with the text in this
section.)
Many things besides people and animals
emit infrared light - the Earth, the Sun,
and far away things like stars and galaxies
do also! For a view from Earth orbit,
whether we are looking out into space or
down at Earth, we can use instruments on
board satellites.
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Satellites like GOES 6 and Landsat 7
look at the Earth. Special sensors,
like those aboard the Landsat 7
satellite, record data about the
amount of infrared light reflected
or emitted from the Earth's surface.
|

Landsat 7 |
Other satellites, like the Infrared
Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) look up into
space and measure the infrared light coming
from things like large clouds of dust and
gas, stars, and galaxies!
What does the Infrared show us?
| This
is an infrared image of the Earth
taken by the GOES 6 satellite in
1986. A scientist used temperatures
to determine which parts of the
image were from clouds and which
were land and sea. Based on these
temperature differences, he colored
each separately using 256 colors,
giving the image a realistic
appearance.
Why use the infrared to image the
Earth? While it is easier to
distinguish clouds from land in the
visible range, there is more detail
in the clouds in the infrared. This
is great for studying cloud
structure. For instance, note that
darker clouds are warmer, while
lighter clouds are cooler. Southeast
of the Galapagos, just west of the
coast of South America, there is a
place where you can distinctly see
multiple layers of clouds, with the
warmer clouds at lower altitudes,
closer to the ocean that's warming
them. |

Space Science and Engineering
Center,
University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Richard Kohrs, designer
|
We know, from looking at an infrared
image of a cat, that many things emit
infrared light. But many things also reflect
infrared light, particularly near infrared
light. Near infrared radiation is not
related to the temperature of the object
being photographed - unless the object is
very, very hot.
Infrared film 'sees' the object because
the Sun (or some other light source) shines
infrared light on it and it is reflected or
absorbed by the object. You could say that
this reflecting or absorbing of infrared
helps to determine the object's 'color' -
its color being a combination of red, green,
blue, and infrared!
| This image of a
building with a tree and grass shows
how Chlorophyll in plants reflect
near infrared waves along with
visible light waves. Even though we
can't see the infrared waves, they
are always there. The visible light
waves drawn on this picture are
green, and the infrared ones are
pale red. |
 |
| This
image was taken with special film
that can detect invisible infrared
waves. This is a false-color image,
just like the one of the cat.
False-color infrared images of the
Earth frequently use a color scheme
like the one shown here, where
infrared light is mapped to the
visible color of red. This means
that everything in this image that
appears red is giving off or
reflecting infrared light. This
makes vegetation like grasa and
trees appear to be red. The visible
light waves drawn on this picture
are green, and the infrared ones are
darker red. |
|
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This
is an image of Phoenix, Arizona
showing the near infrared data
collected by the Landsat 5
satellite. The light areas are areas
with high reflectance of near
infrared waves. The dark areas show
little reflectance. What do you
think the black grid lines in the
lower right of this image represent?
|
 |
This
image shows the infrared data
(appearing as red) composited with
visible light data at the blue and
green wavelengths. If near infrared
is reflected off of healthy
vegetation, what do you think the
red square shaped areas are in the
lower left of the image?
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Instruments on board satellites can also
take pictures of things in space. The image
below of the center region of our galaxy was
taken by IRAS. The hazy, horizontal S-shaped
feature that crosses the image is faint heat
emitted by dust in the plane of the Solar
System.
 
Infrared Processing and Analysis Center,
Caltech/JPL |