FLIR PathFindIR User Manual page 36

Thermal imaging system
Hide thumbs Also See for PathFindIR:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

8 – Infrared Technology
Figure 8-5: Electromagnetic Spectrum
The primary source of infrared radiation is heat or thermal radiation. Any
object which has a temperature radiates in the infrared portion of the
electromagnetic spectrum. Even objects that are 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.
Infrared cameras produce an image of invisible infrared or "heat" radiation
that is unseen by the human eye. There are no colors or "shades" of gray
in infrared, only varying intensities of radiated energy. The infrared imager
converts this energy into an image that we can interpret. Several detector
technologies exist; the sensor in the PathFindIR is of the latest solid state
design, offering long life and fully automatic image optimization (contrast
and gain). True thermal imagers should not be confused with infrared
illuminator cameras that are often presented as simply "infrared
cameras." There are hundreds of low cost infrared illuminated cameras on
the market at prices below $100. These cameras do not produce the same
image because they do not detect heat. They operate in wavelengths near
visible, and require an IR illuminator to provide an image. IR illuminators
have very short range, and require a lot of power to see beyond 5 meters.
34
04/07
334-0001-00-10, version 100

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents