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Understanding Infrared Thermography Reading 7 Part 2 of 2.pdf

Understanding Infrared Thermography Reading 7 Part 2 of 2.pdf

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The Mercury- Cadmium-Telluride (HgCdTe) Detector – FPA<br />

Sept 29, 2011 - Portrait <strong>of</strong> Two Asteroids in Different Light - This animation illustrates the benefits <strong>of</strong> observing asteroids in infrared light. It begins by<br />

showing two artistic interpretations <strong>of</strong> asteroids up close. They are about the same size but the one on the right is darker. The animation zooms away to<br />

show how a visible-light telescope would see these two space rocks, located at the same distance millions <strong>of</strong> miles away from Earth, against a background<br />

<strong>of</strong> more distant stars. The one on the left would be much easier to see because it reflects more visible light from the sun. The animation then transitions to<br />

an infrared view <strong>of</strong> the same two objects. Both asteroids are equally as bright because the telescope is picking up infrared light coming from the bodies<br />

themselves, as a result <strong>of</strong> being heated by the sun. The measurements are not strongly affected by how light or dark an asteroid is, a property called albedo.<br />

Instead, the brightness is more directly related to an asteroid's size. Therefore, infrared telescopes like WISE are better at both finding the small, dark<br />

asteroids and determining asteroid sizes.<br />

Charlie Chong/ Fion Zhang<br />

http://wise.ssl.berkeley.edu/gallery_detector.html

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