SpaceBear
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What's the bandwidth of CMB and what was the bandwidth of CMB when it was emitted (at the moment when the Universe was 379,000 years old)?
The discussion revolves around the bandwidth of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation, particularly focusing on its characteristics at the time of emission when the Universe was approximately 379,000 years old. Participants explore the nature of the CMB as a black body, its spectral properties, and potential applications of CMB radiation.
Participants express multiple competing views regarding the definition of the CMB as a black body and its bandwidth characteristics. The discussion remains unresolved with no consensus on these points.
Some limitations include the dependence on definitions of black body radiation and the lack of clarity on the upper and lower frequency limits of the CMB spectrum. Additionally, the discussion includes speculative ideas about energy harvesting that are not grounded in established methods.
Mordred said:Marcus I'm not sure I would call the CMB a perfect blackbody. A perfect blackbody had total absorbsion of all wavelengths from zero to infinity
Mordred said:Perhaps I am misunderstanding in how one defines a blackbody as opposed to a transparent, grey, colored etc body.
This is a subject covered in an article that I have been recently studying
http://books.google.ca/books?id=IIIVHRirRgEC&pg=PA386&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false
I linked the section of the textbook at the descripive.
I would be interested in what is the mainstay definition of what defines a perfect blackbody in regards or opposition of the related link.
negativzero said:Could you make a lens with a diffraction grating and focus the microwave energy?
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Could you make a lens with a diffraction grating and focus the microwave energy?
Is there a practical way to soak up energy from the background?