Flir ThermovisionPathFindIR LE User Manual
Here you can view all the pages of manual Flir ThermovisionPathFindIR LE User Manual. The Flir manuals for Thermovision are available online for free. You can easily download all the documents as PDF.
Page 31
334-0001-00-10-LE, rev. 100 May ’0825 8 8 – Infrared Technology8 – Infrared Technology true only until 1830, when the Italian investigator, Melloni, made his great discovery that naturally occurring rock salt (NaCl)—which was available in large enough natural crystals to be made into lenses and prisms—is remarkably transparent to the infrared. The result was that rock salt became the principal infrared optical material, and remained so for the next hundred years, until the art of synthetic crystal...
Page 32
8 – Infrared Technology 26May ’08 334-0001-00-10-LE, rev. 1008 – Infrared Technology Figure 8-4: Samuel P. Langley (1834–1906) The improvement of infrared-detector sensitivity progressed slowly. Another major breakthrough, made by Langley in 1880, was the invention of the bolometer. This consisted of a thin blackened strip of platinum connected in one arm of a Wheatstone bridge circuit upon which the infrared radiation was focused and to which a sensitive galvanometer responded. This instrument is...
Page 33
334-0001-00-10-LE, rev. 100 May ’0827 8 8 – Infrared Technology8 – Infrared Technology converter and the photon detector. At first, the image converter received the greatest attention by the military, because it enabled an observer for the first time in history to literally ‘see in the dark’. However, the sensitivity of the image converter was limited to the near infrared wavelengths, and the most interesting military targets (i.e. enemy soldiers) had to be illuminated by infrared search beams....
Page 34
8 – Infrared Technology 28May ’08 334-0001-00-10-LE, rev. 1008 – Infrared Technology The primary source of infrared radiation is heat or thermal radiation. Any object which has a temperature radiates in the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Even objects that are very cold, such as an ice cube, emit infrared. When an object is not quite hot enough to radiate visible light, it will emit most of its energy in the infrared. For example, hot charcoal may not give off light, but it does...
Page 35
334-0001-00-10-LE, rev. 100 May ’08i – – Document History Table -1: Revision History Revision Date Comment 100 May 15, 2008 Initial release
Page 36
Santa Barbara Portland CVS World Headquarters FLIR Systems, Inc. 70 Castilian Dr. Goleta, CA 93117 USA PH: +1.888.747.FLIR (+1.888.747.3547)FLIR Corporate Headquarters FLIR Systems, Inc. 27700A SW Parkway Ave. Wilsonville, OR 97070 USA Netherlands CVS Eurasian Headquarters FLIR Commercial Vision Systems B.V. Charles Petitweg 21 4847 NW Teteringen - Breda The Netherlands