RADIOMETER

rāˌdēŏmˈətər, instrument for detection or measurement of electromagnetic radiation; the term is applied in particular to devices used to measure infrared radiation. One of the earliest experiments in radiometry was performed c.1800 by W. Herschel, who observed the heating of a mercury thermometer by sunlight; he was also able to detect heat radiated from hot but not incandescent bodies. E. Becquerel was able (c.1843) to detect near-infrared radiation by photographic means. Radiometers that function by an increase in the temperature of the device, such as Herschel's thermometer, are called thermal detectors. Commonly used thermal detectors include the thermocouple, which produces a voltage when heated, and the bolometer, which changes in electrical resistance when heated. Devices that can, in principle, detect a single quantum of radiant energy, such as Becquerel's photographic plate, are called quantum detectors. Many current quantum detectors are based on the photoelectric cell. The term radiometer is often used to refer specifically to a type of thermal detector invented by Sir William Crookes (c.1874). Because his device was somewhat insensitive and not readily calibrated, it is rarely used today as a scientific instrument. A Crookes radiometer consists essentially of two parts. The first part is a glass bulb from which most of the air has been removed, creating a partial vacuum. The second part is a rotor that is mounted on a vertical support inside the bulb. The rotor consists of four light, horizontal arms mounted at right angles to one another on a central pivot; the rotor can turn freely in the horizontal plane. At the outer end of each arm is mounted a metal vane, placed vertically. Each vane has one side polished and the other blackened; the vanes are arranged so that the polished side of one faces the blackened side of the next. When radiant energy strikes the polished surfaces, most of it is reflected away, but when it strikes the blackened surfaces, most of it is absorbed, raising the temperature of the surfaces. The air near a blackened surface thus becomes hotter, exerts a greater pressure on the blackened surface, and causes the rotor to turn. The rate of rotation provides an indication of the intensity of the radiation.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Radiometer
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books on: Radiometer  - 127 results

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...electronic age 201 Electricity and matter. Much ado about nothing. Electric discharge tubes. Crookes radiometer. The Edison effect. Joseph John Thomson and the electron. Further work at the Cavendish Laboratory. John Ambrose Fleming...
...described. For example, consider the radiometer, invented by William Crookes in...glass bowl. When light falls on the radiometer, the vanes rotate. At first it was...had tried to produce a vacuum in his radiometer. Obviously if we accept the agreed...
...pickup, acoustic sound box . ACOUSTIC RADIATING ELEMENT. See radiating element, acoustic. ACOUSTIC RADIOMETER. See radiometer, acoustic. ACOUSTIC REACTANCE. See reactance, acoustic. ACOUSTIC REACTANCE, SPECIFIC. See...
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journal articles on: Radiometer  - 36 results

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...sub.2 (the size of the area on the ground represented by each unit in the image), the low-cost advanced very-high-resolution radiometer (AVHRR) has a much coarser resolution (2.2-16 km.sub.2, and aerial photographs can be digitized to a very fine resolution...
...NOAA) Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer...to use similar Along Tract Scanning Radiometer (ATSR) 1/2, and Moderate Resolution...using advanced very high-resolution radiometer (AVHRR) imagery in Millington A C and...
...extinguish the LEDs. The level of hypoxia was continuously monitored with a finger probe oximeter (Radiometer Pulse OXImeter, Radiometer Copenhagen, Denmark) that measured SaO.sub.2. Other physiological measures were collected, but these...
...has had significant input into ATSR2 (Along Track Scanning Radiometer of ERS2). Looking beyond European collaboration, UK physical...of strategies for using three sensors (Along Track Scanning Radiometer, ATSR; Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar, ASAR; and the Medium...
...the Sun is more luminous at solar maximum than at minimum. Measurements by satellite instruments such as the Active Cavity Radiometer Irradiance Monitor (ACRIM) on the Solar Maximum Mission (SMM) and the Earth Radiation Budget experiment (ERB) on Nimbus 7...
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magazine articles on: Radiometer  - 8 results

       More magazine Results: 1-8 >>  
 
...person as for the religious. I have a radiometer in my office. In direct sunlight it...but shining--emitting energy. What the radiometer is doing is what the engineers made...black and the other side white. The radiometer will work as well for non-religious...
...images were created by a specially designed piece of technology called the Advanced Space-borne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer, or ASTER. ASTER was engineereed in Japan before being placed aboard NASAs Terra satellite as part of NASAs Earth Observing...
...mere ten per cent. Satellite images such as this, taken by the ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer) instrument aboard NASAs Terra satellite, confirm that not only is the decline continuing, it has actually sped up in the...
...scientist for the University of Alabama in Huntsville and the U.S. Science Team Leader for the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer on NASAs Aqua satellite; Dr. Mitch Taylor, one of the premier-polar bear researchers and a continuing member of the IUCN Polar...
...discussions for an ARS-EMBRAPA-NASA program to establish data-collecting stations in Brazil for an Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer satellite that can monitor the water cycle on Earths surface. Planting by the book Water in the soil, or lack of it, is...
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newspaper articles on: Radiometer  - 2 results

 
 
...ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer) image of the Malosmadulu Atolls was recorded on December...on May 8, 2006, in this image captured by a heat-sensitive radiometer on Nasas Terra satellite. Perus most active volcano forced...
...his colleagues continue to learn more every day. He talks of inventions such as the SFMR (for Steps Frequency Microwave Radiometer), which weather planes use to measure the brightness of the ocean at the center of a hurricane; and of a program called C...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Radiometer  - 3 results

 
 
RADIOMETER ra deom t r, instrument for detection or measurement...detect near-infrared radiation by photographic means. Radiometers that function by an increase in the temperature of the...detectors are based on the photoelectric cell . The term radiometer is often used to refer specifically to a type of thermal...
...engineering at the Univ. of Manchester, where his courses attracted a number of outstanding students. He developed the theory of the radiometer and determined by direct measurement the mechanical equivalent of heat. Reynolds made many contributions to theoretical engineering...
...to make visible the flashes produced by bombarding a screen with the alpha rays of a particle of radium, and he devised the radiometer, which measures the intensity of radiant energy. He also intensively studied the rare earths and diamonds. Crookes devised...


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