Sentences with phrase «micrometer wavelength»

One - micrometer wavelength ultrafast laser emission is transformed to a powerful tool for ultrabroadband mid-infrared spectroscopy.
Satellite instruments such as those on GOES can detect water vapor in the infrared spectrum between the 6.7 to 7.3 micrometer wavelength ranges.

Not exact matches

Stereocilia are extremely small, less than a half a micrometer in diameter, which is about the wavelength of a visible light.
The spectrometer will measure the corona in infrared wavelengths between 1 and 6 micrometers — the first time it has been measured fully in this range.
To dig a few centimeters deeper into Mercury's surface, solar physicist Amir Caspi and planetary scientist Constantine Tsang of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., and colleagues will use an infrared camera, specially built by Alabama - based Southern Research, that detects wavelengths between 3 and 5 micrometers.
Messenger took measurements of reflected light from Mercury's surface at wavelengths shorter than 1 micrometer, which revealed, among other things, that Mercury contains a surprising amount of sulfur and potassium (SN: 7/16/11, p. 12).
Those wavelengths come only from the top few micrometers of Mercury.
As a first step, during the eclipse on August 21, Samra and others will observe the corona in wavelengths of infrared light between 1 and 4 micrometers.
The «epsilon - near - zero» region for this material is linked to light of a specific frequency, roughly a wavelength of 1.2 micrometers.
This wavelength is of interest because it is in between that of visible light and light of wavelength 1.5 micrometers.
The diameters of the thinnest cables, however, are in the micrometer range, as the light waves — with a wavelength of around one micrometer — must be able to oscillate unhindered.
The team's design consists of a circuit of coupled silicon waveguides that guide infrared light with a wavelength of 1.5 micrometers.
The team determined this by detecting two types of carbon monoxide signatures, an absorption signature at a wavelength of about 1.6 micrometers and an emission signature at about 4.5 micrometers.
The realized mirror converts light from a wavelength of 8 micrometers to 4 micrometers; however, the structures can be tailored to work at other wavelengths, from near - infrared to mid-infrared to terahertz.
When it has all its receiver bands enabled, ALMA will capture radiation from space in longer wavelengths, from a few hundred micrometers to approximately 1 millimeter (close to one thousand times longer than visible light waves).
The molecular structure of CO2 is such that it is «tuned» to the wavelengths of infrared (heat) radiation emitted by the Earth's surface back into space, in particular to the 15 micrometer band.
With a diameter of just 300 micrometers, these generate a blue laser beam with a wavelength of 450 nanometers.
The reason for this is as follows: Carbon dioxide has three absorption bands at wavelengths of 4.26, 7.52, and 14.99 micrometers (microns).13 The Earth's emission spectrum, treated as a black body (no atmospheric absorption), peaks at between 15 and 20 microns, and falls off rapidly with decreasing wavelength.
... the long wave infrared radiation from the atmosphere has a lot to low energy (wavelength) one is not deeper than a fraction of a millimeter (10 micrometers).
[«Humans at normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 μm (micrometers)» - wiki]
Your eyes can only receive light with wavelengths between 0.4 and 0.7 micrometers.
The radiation is dealt with under two heads (1) Luminous rays, (2) Dark heat rays of wavelength exceeding about 2 micrometers.
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