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black body
(redirected from Blackbody Temperature)

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black body

In physics, a hypothetical object that completely absorbs all electromagnetic radiation striking it. It is also a perfect emitter of thermal radiation.

Although a black body is hypothetical, a practical approximation can be made by using a small hole in the wall of a constant-temperature enclosure. The radiation emitted by a black body is of all wavelengths, but with maximum radiation at a particular wavelength that depends on the body's temperature. As the temperature increases, the wavelength of maximum intensity becomes shorter (see Wien's displacement law). The total energy emitted at all wavelengths is proportional to the fourth power of the absolute temperature (see Stefan–Boltzmann law). Attempts to explain these facts failed until the development of quantum theory in 1900.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
An optical pyrometer measures the blackbody temperature by sensing radiation from one end of the furnace.
The initial operation has demonstrated long-term stability of the blackbody temperature within these limits.
Because the former angle is larger than the latter one, geometrical optics suggests that the total power detected depends only on the blackbody temperature and a geometrical factor related to the pinhole aperture, detector optics, and relative separation, because the detector pupil is overfilled.
 
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