Reading a book in the infrared

AI Thread Summary
Reading a standard textbook in complete darkness using infrared goggles is unlikely to be successful without a specific light source, as typical light amplification goggles operate at wavelengths where room temperature objects emit little radiation. The ink would need to have a different emissivity than the paper for any visibility, and even then, the effectiveness would diminish as the materials reach thermal equilibrium. Infrared goggles typically require additional illumination, such as infrared LEDs, to function properly in total darkness. The discussion highlights the challenges of using thermal imaging for reading text, especially in a scenario like a pitch-black cave. Overall, without special conditions, reading a book in infrared in such an environment is not feasible.
Deep_Spacing
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
If you walked into a cave that led several stories underground, completely cut off by light, would you be able to read a standard textbook you'd carried with you using a set of infrared goggles? Along with a spectrometer? After several days? My guesses are no, in all cases, unless the ink print contained something metallic; in which case you might be able to, until it had cooled to the same stable temperature of the pages.

This is a long-standing argument with friends, when as kids we were playing D&D with an Elf who came across a tome in a pitch-black dungeon. :)
 
Science news on Phys.org
Maybe the ink would reflect the infrared body-heat radiation differently from the rest of the page?

Btw, for different types of objects that are in thermal equilibrium, isn't the thermal radiation spectrum still different from material to material?

Torquil
 
Light amplification goggles typically use wavelengths 900 nm and shorter. There is little emission from "room temperature" objects at these wavelengths. Without a light source such as an infrared LED (which are available on some light amplification devices), you would not see anything. You would need a thermal imager and the ink would need to have a different emissivity than the paper. You might want to warm up the paper maybe by holding your hand on it for better viewing.
 
Thanks - good points.
 
Thread 'A quartet of epi-illumination methods'
Well, it took almost 20 years (!!!), but I finally obtained a set of epi-phase microscope objectives (Zeiss). The principles of epi-phase contrast is nearly identical to transillumination phase contrast, but the phase ring is a 1/8 wave retarder rather than a 1/4 wave retarder (because with epi-illumination, the light passes through the ring twice). This method was popular only for a very short period of time before epi-DIC (differential interference contrast) became widely available. So...
I am currently undertaking a research internship where I am modelling the heating of silicon wafers with a 515 nm femtosecond laser. In order to increase the absorption of the laser into the oxide layer on top of the wafer it was suggested we use gold nanoparticles. I was tasked with modelling the optical properties of a 5nm gold nanoparticle, in particular the absorption cross section, using COMSOL Multiphysics. My model seems to be getting correct values for the absorption coefficient and...

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
8
Views
2K
Replies
42
Views
12K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
8
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
4K
Replies
9
Views
3K
Back
Top