jbriggs444 said:
That assertion is incorrect.
It is true that a black object will equilibriate with its environment more rapidly than a white and because of this it will initially be at a higher temperature when exposed to light. But it will attain the same temperature in the long run (assuming a uniform environment). At that equilibrium temperature, it will be radiating more than the white object because of its color, not because of its temperature.
[Edit: Okay, I think I see what you mean now. What you say is true in situations lacking in some sort of cooling mechanism, such as the objects transferring heat to the surrounding air (like why we are not at the temperature of the sun just because we take an afternoon walk). But in the presence of such mechanisms, black objects become hotter when when exposed to light/radiation such as sunlight.]
An energy source (the light/radiation source) is present here, and that changes things.
The filament of incandescent light source requires an energy source for it to work. After the light bulb has been turned on for some time, its temperature stabilizes and the light bulb emits as much energy as is given to it (overall). It is, in a sense, in a state of equilibrium. Its temperature is constant.
The room in which the light bulb is in might initially heat up slightly, but assuming the room is not perfectly insulated, the ambient temperature of the room will eventually reach a state of equilibrium too, and the ambient temperature of the room will remain constant. So both the light bulb and the room are in a state of equilibrium.
But it's altogether different to claim that the temperature of the light bulb filament (when still turned on) is equal to the ambient temperature of the room. I claim that the filament is hotter.
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There exist solar water heaters that operate by piping water through pipes exposed to the sunshine. The color of the pipes matter. Given the choice between black and white pipes, the black pipes heat the water more.
There's plenty of experimental evidence for this: paint two objects, one black and one white (all else being equal except for the paint color). Put them both in the bright sunshine for awhile and measure their temperature. The black object will be hotter.
There has been debate on the details of the mechanism, but there is no debate on the fact that a typical toy radiometer does not rotate in the "right" direction. It is not the momentum of the light, but the temperature difference between the two faces of each vane that is relevant.
It depends on what you mean by "right." Approaching the problem with the wrong principles of how light imparts momentum (i.e., wrong choice of "right") can lead to conclusions that do not conform to nature and experiment.
If the radiometer is exposed to sunlight from all directions and if it is at the associated equilibrium temperature (the temperature of the surface of the sun) it will fail to operate.
Can you verify that with a credible reference?
