Does heat independently cause Infrared radiation?

AI Thread Summary
Rubbing hands together in a dark room generates heat, which produces infrared radiation independently of outside light sources. The infrared radiation emitted is a result of the body's temperature, not reliant on external radiation. While the temperature of the hands may not change significantly, the sensation of heat is due to increased blood flow. Similarly, friction between two blocks of wood can generate heat, potentially leading to visible glow if sufficient friction is applied. Humans continuously emit body heat, confirming that heat can indeed cause infrared radiation.
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If I rubbed my hands together in a dark room (no outside light source), could the heat i produce cause Infrared radiation?

Or is the infrared radiation from our bodies dependent on outside radiation?
 
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Infrared radiation is produced directly from the temperature of a body (at least for a blackbody - but that's not important for now).
Your hands would give off IR when you rub them together - although really their temperature doesn't change much - they feel hot because of the extra blood flow.

If you rubbed two blocks of wood together in the dark they would get warm, eventually (if you did well in boy scouts) they would even glow red in the visible.
 
Yeah i guess humans give off body heat regardless. Thanks
 

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