Does Colour Affect Light Absorption in Infrared Radiation?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the relationship between color and light absorption, specifically in the context of infrared radiation. Participants explore how the color of an object may influence its thermal properties and absorption characteristics across different wavelengths, including visible and infrared light.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant asserts that white objects reflect more light across all frequencies, including infrared, making them cooler than black objects.
  • Another participant claims that the absorption of infrared light does not correlate with visible light absorption, citing examples like black trash bags being transparent to infrared.
  • A participant emphasizes that the appearance of an object in visible light does not guarantee similar reflective properties in infrared, suggesting the need to refer to specific absorption spectra.
  • There is a suggestion that the psychological association of colors with temperature (hot and cold) is not based on physical principles.
  • One participant questions whether two objects of the same visible color could absorb different amounts of infrared radiation, which is affirmed by another participant.
  • A participant advises caution in using the term 'color' in quantitative physics discussions, highlighting the limitations of human perception as a measuring tool.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the relationship between color and infrared absorption, with no consensus reached on whether color influences infrared absorption characteristics. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the implications of color on thermal properties.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the importance of specific absorption spectra and the limitations of visual perception in measuring physical properties, indicating that assumptions about color may not hold true across different wavelengths.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those studying thermodynamics, optics, or materials science, particularly in relation to the properties of materials and their interactions with different wavelengths of light.

eightsquare
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First, let me see if my facts are straight. White coloured objects reflect more light of ALL frequencies than black coloured objects, including infrared, etc. Hence a white coloured object is cooler than a black coloured object. If visible light was the only factor, a blue room would be cooler than a red room as blue light has more energy. I"m assuming same wall area and intensity of light. I wanted to know about the trends of these colours in infrared absorption. Does blue absorb less infrared than red? In a more realistic situation where the sun"s rays are incident on a wall, will a blue coloured wall be still be cooler now that other frequencies of light are also incident? Thanks.
 
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The amount of IR light absorbed by an object does not depend on how well it absorbs visible frequencies. For example, a black trash bag is transparent to IR light.
 
The fact that an object looks white (in visible light) does not guarantee that it will reflect well in infrared or any other frequency range.
I don't think there is any trend. You just have to look at the specific absorption spectrum.
An object may be blue (or red) for different reasons.

The association between colors and "hot" and "cold" is not a physical one but rather psychological.

Edit. I did not know that Drakkith is already on it. :)
 
Thanks guys! So two objects that look exactly the same to us(say blue in colour) can absorb different amounts of IR radiation?
 
It's a good idea to avoid using the word 'colour' in any quantitative discussion in Physics except when the subject is 'perception' (and that won't be Physics). The eye is a really rubbish measuring instrument (spectrometer) and you cannot rely on it to tell you the right thing.
 
eightsquare said:
Thanks guys! So two objects that look exactly the same to us(say blue in colour) can absorb different amounts of IR radiation?
yes.
 
Ok great, thanks.
 

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