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Thermal Sensing with Short-Wave Infrared Detectors

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Technique allows regular glass optics to be used with thermal detectors.

Hank Hogan

Because glass is not transparent at mid- and long-infrared wavelengths, it stops current thermal detectors cold. Consequently, regular glass lenses cannot be used for these thermal imagers, and thermal imagers cannot peer through the window of a vehicle to look for interlopers or through an electrical box to find overheated switches. Researchers built a short-wavelength IR detector using a thermoelectrically cooled indium gallium arsenide detector (photodiode) and commercial visible-wavelength-optimized optics (left). Measurements show that the readings of a 50 °C blackbody with the...Read full article

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    Published: March 2008
    Glossary
    glass
    A noncrystalline, inorganic mixture of various metallic oxides fused by heating with glassifiers such as silica, or boric or phosphoric oxides. Common window or bottle glass is a mixture of soda, lime and sand, melted and cast, rolled or blown to shape. Most glasses are transparent in the visible spectrum and up to about 2.5 µm in the infrared, but some are opaque such as natural obsidian; these are, nevertheless, useful as mirror blanks. Traces of some elements such as cobalt, copper and...
    glassinfrared wavelengthslensesResearch & TechnologySensors & Detectors

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