Emissivity of Skin: Unity & Ice | Need Help & Guidance

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The emissivity of human skin is close to unity, indicating it emits radiation effectively, regardless of pigment. Ice also exhibits high emissivity, which may lead to misconceptions about the relationship between temperature and emissivity. Emissivity measures how well a material emits electromagnetic radiation, particularly in the infrared spectrum. Real materials have varying emissivity based on their surface properties, with smooth metals typically exhibiting low emissivity and insulators showing high emissivity. Understanding the distinction between diffuse and specular reflectivity is crucial for grasping the concept of emissivity.
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I have found from various sources that the emissivity of human skin, irrespective of pigment, is close to unity.

I am also unsure as to why ice has such a high emissivity too- perhaps my understanding of emissivity is fundamentally flawed!

Any help or guidance on this topic would be greatly appreciated!

Many thanks in advance :)
 
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msbird said:
I have found from various sources that the emissivity of human skin, irrespective of pigment, is close to unity.

It sounds like was given to you as an example to avoid any misinterpretation of Black Body Radiation.

msbird said:
I am also unsure as to why ice has such a high emissivity too- perhaps my understanding of emissivity is fundamentally flawed!)

...and this was given to illustrate that emissivity isn't about how cold something is.


Emissivity is a measure of how readily a material emits electromagnetic radiation. Typically this is of infrared frequencies, ie heat. You maybe recall learning about how heat can be transmitted by conduction, convection and radiation. We're talking about the radiation part.

An emissivity of 1 represents the emissivity of a perfectly Black Body. Which means that it emits radiation at the maximum possible rate.

Emissivity of real materials is determined by the surface properties of the electromagnetic field for a given material. Typically smooth shiny metals have low emissivity, wheres as insulators have high emissivity.

Another source of confusion, perhaps is the relation between specular reflectivity and emissivity. It's important not to confuse diffuse reflectivity, which determines the colour of a material, with specular reflectivity, which determines how shiny it appears.
 
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So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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