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Black body

A black body or blackbody is an idealized physical body that absorbs all incident electromagnetic radiation, regardless of frequency or angle of incidence. The name "black body" is given because it absorbs all colors of light. A black body also emits black-body radiation. In contrast, a white body is one with a "rough surface that reflects all incident rays completely and uniformly in all directions."[1]

A black body radiator used in CARLO laboratory in Poland. It is an approximation of a model described by Planck's law utilized as a spectral irradiance standard.

As the temperature of a black body decreases, its intensity also decreases and its peak moves to longer wavelengths. Shown for comparison is the classical Rayleigh–Jeans law and its ultraviolet catastrophe.

A black body in thermal equilibrium (that is, at a constant temperature) emits electromagnetic black-body radiation. The radiation is emitted according to Planck's law, meaning that it has a spectrum that is determined by the temperature alone (see figure at right), not by the body's shape or composition.

An ideal black body in thermal equilibrium has two main properties:[2]

  1. It is an ideal emitter: at every frequency, it emits as much or more thermal radiative energy as any other body at the same temperature.
  2. It is a diffuse emitter: measured per unit area perpendicular to the direction, the energy is radiated isotropically, independent of direction.

An approximate realization of a black surface is a hole in the wall of a large insulated enclosure (an oven, for example). Any light entering the hole is reflected or absorbed at the internal surfaces of the body and is unlikely to re-emerge, making the hole a nearly perfect absorber. When the radiation confined in such an enclosure is in thermal equilibrium, the radiation emitted from the hole will be as great as from any body at that equilibrium temperature.[further explanation needed]

Real materials emit energy at a fraction—called the emissivity—of black-body energy levels. By definition, a black body in thermal equilibrium has an emissivity ε = 1. A source with a lower emissivity, independent of frequency, is often referred to as a gray body.[3][4] Constructing black bodies with an emissivity as close to 1 as possible remains a topic of current interest.[5]

In astronomy, the radiation from stars and planets is sometimes characterized in terms of an effective temperature, the temperature of a black body that would emit the same total flux of electromagnetic energy.

Definition

The idea of a black body originally was introduced by Gustav Kirchhoff in 1860 as follows:

...the supposition that bodies can be imagined which, for infinitely small thicknesses, completely absorb all incident rays, and neither reflect nor transmit any. I shall call such bodies perfectly black, or, more briefly, black bodies.[6]

A more modern definition drops the reference to "infinitely small thicknesses":[7]

An ideal body is now defined, called a blackbody. A blackbody allows all incident radiation to pass into it (no reflected energy) and internally absorbs all the incident radiation (no energy transmitted through the body). This is true for radiation of all wavelengths and for all angles of incidence. Hence the blackbody is a perfect absorber for all incident radiation.[8]

Idealizations

This section describes some concepts developed in connection with black bodies.

 
An approximate realization of a black body as a tiny hole in an insulated enclosure

Cavity with a hole

A widely used model of a black surface is a small hole in a cavity with walls that are opaque to radiation.[8] Radiation incident on the hole will pass into the cavity, and is very unlikely to be re-emitted if the cavity is large. The hole is not quite a perfect black surface—in particular, if the wavelength of the incident radiation is greater than the diameter of the hole, part will be reflected. Similarly, even in perfect thermal equilibrium, the radiation inside a finite-sized cavity will not have an ideal Planck spectrum for wavelengths comparable to or larger than the size of the cavity.[9]

Suppose the cavity is held at a fixed temperature T and the radiation trapped inside the enclosure is at thermal equilibrium with the enclosure. The hole in the enclosure will allow some radiation to escape. If the hole is small, radiation passing in and out of the hole has negligible effect upon the equilibrium of the radiation inside the cavity. This escaping radiation will approximate black-body radiation that exhibits a distribution in energy characteristic of the temperature T and does not depend upon the properties of the cavity or the hole, at least for wavelengths smaller than the size of the hole.[9] See the figure in the Introduction for the spectrum as a function of the frequency of the radiation, which is related to the energy of the radiation by the equation E = hf, with E = energy, h = Planck's constant, f = frequency.

At any given time the radiation in the cavity may not be in thermal equilibrium, but the second law of thermodynamics states that if left undisturbed it will eventually reach equilibrium,[10] although the time it takes to do so may be very long.[11] Typically, equilibrium is reached by continual absorption and emission of radiation by material in the cavity or its walls.[12][13][14][15] Radiation entering the cavity will be "thermalized" by this mechanism: the energy will be redistributed until the ensemble of photons achieves a Planck distribution. The time taken for thermalization is much faster with condensed matter present than with rarefied matter such as a dilute gas. At temperatures below billions of Kelvin, direct photon–photon interactions[16] are usually negligible compared to interactions with matter.[17] Photons are an example of an interacting boson gas,[18] and as described by the H-theorem,[19] under very general conditions any interacting boson gas will approach thermal equilibrium.

Transmission, absorption, and reflection

A body's behavior with regard to thermal radiation is characterized by its transmission τ, absorption α, and reflection ρ.

The boundary of a body forms an interface with its surroundings, and this interface may be rough or smooth. A nonreflecting interface separating regions with different refractive indices must be rough, because the laws of reflection and refraction governed by the Fresnel equations for a smooth interface require a reflected ray when the refractive indices of the material and its surroundings differ.[20] A few idealized types of behavior are given particular names:

An opaque body is one that transmits none of the radiation that reaches it, although some may be reflected.[21][22] That is, τ = 0 and α + ρ = 1.

A transparent body is one that transmits all the radiation that reaches it. That is, τ = 1 and α = ρ = 0.

A grey body is one where α, ρ and τ are constant for all wavelengths. This term also is used to mean a body for which α is temperature- and wavelength-independent.

A white body is one for which all incident radiation is reflected uniformly in all directions: τ = 0, α = 0, and ρ = 1.

For a black body, τ = 0, α = 1, and ρ = 0. Planck offers a theoretical model for perfectly black bodies, which he noted do not exist in nature: besides their opaque interior, they have interfaces that are perfectly transmitting and non-reflective.[23]

Kirchhoff's perfect black bodies

Kirchhoff in 1860 introduced the theoretical concept of a perfect black body with a completely absorbing surface layer of infinitely small thickness, but Planck noted some severe restrictions upon this idea. Planck noted three requirements upon a black body: the body must (i) allow radiation to enter but not reflect; (ii) possess a minimum thickness adequate to absorb the incident radiation and prevent its re-emission; (iii) satisfy severe limitations upon scattering to prevent radiation from entering and bouncing back out. As a consequence, Kirchhoff's perfect black bodies that absorb all the radiation that falls on them cannot be realized in an infinitely thin surface layer, and impose conditions upon scattering of the light within the black body that are difficult to satisfy.[24][25]

Realizations

A realization of a black body refers to a real world, physical embodiment. Here are a few.

Cavity with a hole

In 1898, Otto Lummer and Ferdinand Kurlbaum published an account of their cavity radiation source.[26] Their design has been used largely unchanged for radiation measurements to the present day. It was a hole in the wall of a platinum box, divided by diaphragms, with its interior blackened with iron oxide. It was an important ingredient for the progressively improved measurements that led to the discovery of Planck's law.[27][28] A version described in 1901 had its interior blackened with a mixture of chromium, nickel, and cobalt oxides.[29] See also Hohlraum.

Near-black materials

There is interest in blackbody-like materials for camouflage and radar-absorbent materials for radar invisibility.[30][31] They also have application as solar energy collectors, and infrared thermal detectors. As a perfect emitter of radiation, a hot material with black body behavior would create an efficient infrared heater, particularly in space or in a vacuum where convective heating is unavailable.[32] They are also useful in telescopes and cameras as anti-reflection surfaces to reduce stray light, and to gather information about objects in high-contrast areas (for example, observation of planets in orbit around their stars), where blackbody-like materials absorb light that comes from the wrong sources.

It has long been known that a lamp-black coating will make a body nearly black. An improvement on lamp-black is found in manufactured carbon nanotubes. Nano-porous materials can achieve refractive indices nearly that of vacuum, in one case obtaining average reflectance of 0.045%.[5][33] In 2009, a team of Japanese scientists created a material called nanoblack which is close to an ideal black body, based on vertically aligned single-walled carbon nanotubes. This absorbs between 98% and 99% of the incoming light in the spectral range from the ultra-violet to the far-infrared regions.[32]

Other examples of nearly perfect black materials are super black, prepared by chemically etching a nickelphosphorus alloy,[34] vertically aligned carbon nanotube arrays (like VantaBlack) and flower carbon nanostructures;[35] all absorb 99.9% of light or more.

Stars and planets

 
An idealized view of the cross-section of a star. The photosphere contains photons of light nearly in thermal equilibrium, and some escape into space as near-black-body radiation.

A star or planet often is modeled as a black body, and electromagnetic radiation emitted from these bodies as black-body radiation. The figure shows a highly schematic cross-section to illustrate the idea. The photosphere of the star, where the emitted light is generated, is idealized as a layer within which the photons of light interact with the material in the photosphere and achieve a common temperature T that is maintained over a long period of time. Some photons escape and are emitted into space, but the energy they carry away is replaced by energy from within the star, so that the temperature of the photosphere is nearly steady. Changes in the core lead to changes in the supply of energy to the photosphere, but such changes are slow on the time scale of interest here. Assuming these circumstances can be realized, the outer layer of the star is somewhat analogous to the example of an enclosure with a small hole in it, with the hole replaced by the limited transmission into space at the outside of the photosphere. With all these assumptions in place, the star emits black-body radiation at the temperature of the photosphere.[36]

 
Effective temperature of a black body compared with the B-V and U-B color index of main sequence and super giant stars in what is called a color-color diagram.[37]

Using this model the effective temperature of stars is estimated, defined as the temperature of a black body that yields the same surface flux of energy as the star. If a star were a black body, the same effective temperature would result from any region of the spectrum. For example, comparisons in the B (blue) or V (visible) range lead to the so-called B-V color index, which increases the redder the star,[38] with the Sun having an index of +0.648 ± 0.006.[39] Combining the U (ultraviolet) and the B indices leads to the U-B index, which becomes more negative the hotter the star and the more the UV radiation. Assuming the Sun is a type G2 V star, its U-B index is +0.12.[40] The two indices for two types of most common star sequences are compared in the figure (diagram) with the effective surface temperature of the stars if they were perfect black bodies. There is a rough correlation. For example, for a given B-V index measurement, the curves of both most common sequences of star (the main sequence and the supergiants) lie below the corresponding black-body U-B index that includes the ultraviolet spectrum, showing that both groupings of star emit less ultraviolet light than a black body with the same B-V index. It is perhaps surprising that they fit a black body curve as well as they do, considering that stars have greatly different temperatures at different depths.[41] For example, the Sun has an effective temperature of 5780 K,[42] which can be compared to the temperature of its photosphere (the region generating the light), which ranges from about 5000 K at its outer boundary with the chromosphere to about 9500 K at its inner boundary with the convection zone approximately 500 km (310 mi) deep.[43]

Black holes

A black hole is a region of spacetime from which nothing escapes. Around a black hole there is a mathematically defined surface called an event horizon that marks the point of no return. It is called "black" because it absorbs all the light that hits the horizon, reflecting nothing, making it almost an ideal black body[44] (radiation with a wavelength equal to or larger than the diameter of the hole may not be absorbed, so black holes are not perfect black bodies).[45] Physicists believe that to an outside observer, black holes have a non-zero temperature and emit black-body radiation, radiation with a nearly perfect black-body spectrum, ultimately evaporating.[46] The mechanism for this emission is related to vacuum fluctuations in which a virtual pair of particles is separated by the gravity of the hole, one member being sucked into the hole, and the other being emitted.[47] The energy distribution of emission is described by Planck's law with a temperature T:

 

where c is the speed of light, ℏ is the reduced Planck constant, kB is the Boltzmann constant, G is the gravitational constant and M is the mass of the black hole.[48] These predictions have not yet been tested either observationally or experimentally.[49]

Cosmic microwave background radiation

The Big Bang theory is based upon the cosmological principle, which states that on large scales the Universe is homogeneous and isotropic. According to theory, the Universe approximately a second after its formation was a near-ideal black body in thermal equilibrium at a temperature above 1010 K. The temperature decreased as the Universe expanded and the matter and radiation in it cooled. The cosmic microwave background radiation observed today is "the most perfect black body ever measured in nature".[50] It has a nearly ideal Planck spectrum at a temperature of about 2.7 K. It departs from the perfect isotropy of true black-body radiation by an observed anisotropy that varies with angle on the sky only to about one part in 100,000.

Radiative cooling

 
Log-log graphs of peak emission wavelength and radiant exitance vs black-body temperature – red arrows show that 5780 K black bodies have 501 nm peak wavelength and 63.3 MW/m2; radiant exitance

The integration of Planck's law over all frequencies provides the total energy per unit of time per unit of surface area radiated by a black body maintained at a temperature T, and is known as the Stefan–Boltzmann law:

 

where σ is the Stefan–Boltzmann constant, σ ≈ 5.67×10−8 W⋅m−2⋅K−4[51] To remain in thermal equilibrium at constant temperature T, the black body must absorb or internally generate this amount of power P over the given area A.

The cooling of a body due to thermal radiation is often approximated using the Stefan–Boltzmann law supplemented with a "gray body" emissivity ε ≤ 1 (P/A = εσT4). The rate of decrease of the temperature of the emitting body can be estimated from the power radiated and the body's heat capacity.[52] This approach is a simplification that ignores details of the mechanisms behind heat redistribution (which may include changing composition, phase transitions or restructuring of the body) that occur within the body while it cools, and assumes that at each moment in time the body is characterized by a single temperature. It also ignores other possible complications, such as changes in the emissivity with temperature,[53][54] and the role of other accompanying forms of energy emission, for example, emission of particles like neutrinos.[55]

If a hot emitting body is assumed to follow the Stefan–Boltzmann law and its power emission P and temperature T are known, this law can be used to estimate the dimensions of the emitting object, because the total emitted power is proportional to the area of the emitting surface. In this way it was found that X-ray bursts observed by astronomers originated in neutron stars with a radius of about 10 km, rather than black holes as originally conjectured.[56] An accurate estimate of size requires some knowledge of the emissivity, particularly its spectral and angular dependence.[57]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Planck 1914, pp. 9–10
  2. ^ Mahmoud Massoud (2005). "§2.1 Blackbody radiation". Engineering thermofluids: thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer. Springer. p. 568. ISBN 978-3-540-22292-7.
  3. ^ The emissivity of a surface in principle depends upon frequency, angle of view, and temperature. However, by definition, the radiation from a gray body is simply proportional to that of a black body at the same temperature, so its emissivity does not depend upon frequency (or, equivalently, wavelength). See Massoud Kaviany (2002). "Figure 4.3(b): Behaviors of a gray (no wavelength dependence), diffuse (no directional dependence) and opaque (no transmission) surface". Principles of heat transfer. Wiley-IEEE. p. 381. ISBN 978-0-471-43463-4. and Ronald G. Driggers (2003). Encyclopedia of optical engineering, Volume 3. CRC Press. p. 2303. ISBN 978-0-8247-4252-2.
  4. ^ Some authors describe sources of infrared radiation with emissivity greater than approximately 0.99 as a black body. See . Education/Reference tab. Electro Optical Industries, Inc. 2008. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
  5. ^ a b Chun, Ai Lin (2008). "Blacker than black". Nature Nanotechnology. doi:10.1038/nnano.2008.29.
  6. ^ Translated by F. Guthrie from Annalen der Physik: 109, 275-301 (1860): G. Kirchhoff (July 1860). "On the relation between the radiating and absorbing powers of different bodies for light and heat". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 20 (130).
  7. ^ The notion of an infinitely thin layer was dropped by Planck. See Planck 1914, p. 10, footnote 2.
  8. ^ a b Siegel, Robert; Howell, John R. (2002). Thermal Radiation Heat Transfer; Volume 1 (4th ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-56032-839-1.
  9. ^ a b Corrections to the spectrum do arise related to boundary conditions at the walls, curvature, and topology, particularly for wavelengths comparable to the cavity dimensions; see Roger Dale Van Zee; J. Patrick Looney (2002). Cavity-enhanced spectroscopies. Academic Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-12-475987-9.
  10. ^ Clement John Adkins (1983). "§4.1 The function of the second law". Equilibrium thermodynamics (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-521-27456-2.
  11. ^ In simple cases the approach to equilibrium is governed by a relaxation time. In others, the system may 'hang up' in a metastable state, as stated by Adkins (1983) on page 10. For another example, see Michel Le Bellac; Fabrice Mortessagne; Ghassan George Batrouni (2004). Equilibrium and non-equilibrium statistical thermodynamics. Cambridge University Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0521821438.
  12. ^ The approach to thermal equilibrium of the radiation in the cavity can be catalyzed by adding a small piece of matter capable of radiating and absorbing at all frequencies. See Peter Theodore Landsberg (1990). Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics (Reprint of Oxford University Press 1978 ed.). Courier Dover Publications. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-486-66493-4.
  13. ^ Planck 1914, p. 44, §52
  14. ^ Loudon 2000, Chapter 1
  15. ^ Mandel & Wolf 1995, Chapter 13
  16. ^ Robert Karplus* and Maurice Neuman, "The Scattering of Light by Light", Phys. Rev. 83, 776–784 (1951)
  17. ^ Ludwig Bergmann; Clemens Schaefer; Heinz Niedrig (1999). Optics of waves and particles. Walter de Gruyter. p. 595. ISBN 978-3-11-014318-8. Because the interaction of the photons with each other is negligible, a small amount of matter is necessary to establish thermodynamic equilibrium of heat radiation.
  18. ^ The fundamental bosons are the photon, the vector bosons of the weak interaction, the gluon, and the graviton. See Allan Griffin; D. W. Snoke; S. Stringari (1996). Bose-Einstein condensation. Cambridge University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-521-58990-1.
  19. ^ Richard Chace Tolman (2010). "§103: Change of H with time as a result of collisions". The principles of statistical mechanics (Reprint of 1938 Oxford University Press ed.). Dover Publications. pp. 455 ff. ISBN 978-0-486-63896-6. ...we can define a suitable quantity H to characterize the condition of a gas which [will exhibit] a tendency to decrease with time as a result of collisions, unless the distribution of the molecules [is already that of] equilibrium. (p. 458)
  20. ^ Paul A. Tipler (1999). "Relative intensity of reflected and transmitted light". Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Parts 1-35; Part 39 (4th ed.). Macmillan. p. 1044. ISBN 978-0-7167-3821-3.
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  22. ^ BA Venkanna (2010). "§10.3.4 Absorptivity, reflectivity, and transmissivity". Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. pp. 385–386. ISBN 978-81-203-4031-2.
  23. ^ Planck 1914, p. 10
  24. ^ Planck 1914, pp. 9–10, §10
  25. ^ Kirchhoff 1860c
  26. ^ Lummer & Kurlbaum 1898
  27. ^ An extensive historical discussion is found in Mehra, Jagdish; Rechenberg, Helmut (2000). The historical development of quantum theory. Springer. pp. 39 ff. ISBN 978-0-387-95174-4.
  28. ^ Kangro 1976, p. 159
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  30. ^ CF Lewis (June 1988). "Materials keep a low profile" (PDF). Mech. Eng.: 37–41.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ Bradley Quinn (2010). Textile Futures. Berg. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-84520-807-3.
  32. ^ a b K. Mizuno; et al. (2009). "A black body absorber from vertically aligned single-walled carbon nanotubes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 106 (15): 6044–6077. Bibcode:2009PNAS..106.6044M. doi:10.1073/pnas.0900155106. PMC 2669394. PMID 19339498.
  33. ^ Zu-Po Yang; et al. (2008). "Experimental observation of an extremely dark material made by a low-density nanotube array". Nano Letters. 8 (2): 446–451. Bibcode:2008NanoL...8..446Y. doi:10.1021/nl072369t. PMID 18181658. S2CID 7412160.
  34. ^ See description of work by Richard Brown and his colleagues at the UK's National Physical Laboratory: Mick Hamer (6 February 2003). "Mini craters key to 'blackest ever black'". New Scientist.
  35. ^ Ghai, Viney; Singh, Harpreet; Agnihotri, Prabhat K. (2019). "Dandelion-Like Carbon Nanotubes for Near-Perfect Black Surfaces". ACS Applied Nano Materials. 2 (12): 7951–7956. doi:10.1021/acsanm.9b01950. S2CID 213017898.
  36. ^ Simon F. Green; Mark H. Jones; S. Jocelyn Burnell (2004). An introduction to the sun and stars. Cambridge University Press. pp. 21–22, 53. ISBN 978-0-521-54622-5. A source in which photons are much more likely to interact with the material within the source than to escape is a condition for the formation of a black-body spectrum
  37. ^ Figure modeled after E. Böhm-Vitense (1989). "Figure 4.9". Introduction to Stellar Astrophysics: Basic stellar observations and data. Cambridge University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-521-34869-0.
  38. ^ David H. Kelley; Eugene F. Milone; Anthony F. (FRW) Aveni (2011). Exploring Ancient Skies: A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy (2nd ed.). Springer. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-4419-7623-9.
  39. ^ David F Gray (February 1995). "Comparing the sun with other stars along the temperature coordinate". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 107: 120–123. Bibcode:1995PASP..107..120G. doi:10.1086/133525.
  40. ^ M Golay (1974). "Table IX: U-B Indices". Introduction to astronomical photometry. Springer. p. 82. ISBN 978-90-277-0428-3.
  41. ^ Lawrence Hugh Aller (1991). Atoms, stars, and nebulae (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-521-31040-6.
  42. ^ Kenneth R. Lang (2006). Astrophysical formulae, Volume 1 (3rd ed.). Birkhäuser. p. 23. ISBN 978-3-540-29692-8.
  43. ^ B. Bertotti; Paolo Farinella; David Vokrouhlický (2003). "Figure 9.2: The temperature profile in the solar atmosphere". New Views of the Solar System. Springer. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-4020-1428-4.
  44. ^ Schutz, Bernard (2004). Gravity From the Group Up: An Introductory Guide to Gravity and General Relativity (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-521-45506-0.
  45. ^ PCW Davies (1978). (PDF). Rep Prog Phys. 41 (8): 1313–1355. Bibcode:1978RPPh...41.1313D. doi:10.1088/0034-4885/41/8/004. S2CID 250916407. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 May 2013.
  46. ^ Robert M Wald (2005). "The thermodynamics of black holes". In Andrés Gomberoff; Donald Marolf (eds.). Lectures on quantum gravity. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 1–38. ISBN 978-0-387-23995-8.
  47. ^ Bernard J Carr & Steven B Giddings (2008). "Chapter 6: Quantum black holes". Beyond Extreme Physics: Cutting-edge science. Rosen Publishing Group, Scientific American (COR). p. 30. ISBN 978-1-4042-1402-6.
  48. ^ Valeri P. Frolov; Andrei Zelnikov (2011). "Equation 9.7.1". Introduction to Black Hole Physics. Oxford University Press. p. 321. ISBN 978-0-19-969229-3.
  49. ^ Robert M Wald (2005). "The thermodynamics of black holes (pp. 1–38)". In Andrés Gomberoff; Donald Marolf (eds.). Lectures on Quantum Gravity. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-387-23995-8. ... no results on black hole thermodynamics have been subject to any experimental or observational tests ...
  50. ^ White, M. (1999). "Anisotropies in the CMB" (PDF). Proceedings of the Los Angeles Meeting, DPF 99. UCLA. See also arXive.org.
  51. ^ "2018 CODATA Value: Stefan–Boltzmann constant". The NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty. NIST. 20 May 2019. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  52. ^ A simple example is provided by Srivastava M. K. (2011). "Cooling by radiation". The Person Guide to Objective Physics for the IIT-JEE. Pearson Education India. p. 610. ISBN 978-81-317-5513-6.
  53. ^ M Vollmer; K-P Mõllmann (2011). "Figure 1.38: Some examples for temperature dependence of emissivity for different materials". Infrared Thermal Imaging: Fundamentals, Research and Applications. John Wiley & Sons. p. 45. ISBN 978-3-527-63087-5.
  54. ^ Robert Osiander; M. Ann Garrison Darrin; John Champion (2006). MEMS and Microstructures in aerospace applications. CRC Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-8247-2637-9.
  55. ^ Krishna Rajagopal; Frank Wilczek (2001). "6.2 Coling by Neutrino Emissions (pp. 2135-2136) – The Condensed Matter Physics of QCD". In Mikhail A. Shifman (ed.). At The Frontier of Particle Physics: Handbook of QCD (On the occasion of the 75th birthday of Professor Boris Ioffe). Vol. 3. Singapore: World Scientific. pp. 2061–2151. arXiv:hep-ph/0011333v2. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.344.2269. doi:10.1142/9789812810458_0043. ISBN 978-981-02-4969-4. S2CID 13606600. For the first 105–6 years of its life, the cooling of a neutron star is governed by the balance between heat capacity and the loss of heat by neutrino emission. ... Both the specific heat CV and the neutrino emission rate Lν are dominated by physics within T of the Fermi surface. ... The star will cool rapidly until its interior temperature is T < Tc ~ ∆, at which time the quark matter core will become inert and the further cooling history will be dominated by neutrino emission from the nuclear matter fraction of the star.
  56. ^ Walter Lewin; Warren Goldstein (2011). "X-ray bursters!". For the love of physics. Simon and Schuster. pp. 251 ff. ISBN 978-1-4391-0827-7.
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Bibliography

External links

  • Keesey, Lori J. (12 December 2010). "Blacker than black". NASA. Engineers now developing a blacker-than pitch material that will help scientists gather hard-to-obtain scientific measurements... nanotech-based material now being developed by a team of 10 technologists at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

black, body, radiation, from, black, body, thermal, equilibrium, black, body, radiation, canadian, short, film, black, bodies, film, black, body, blackbody, idealized, physical, body, that, absorbs, incident, electromagnetic, radiation, regardless, frequency, . For the radiation from a black body in thermal equilibrium see Black body radiation For the Canadian short film see Black Bodies film A black body or blackbody is an idealized physical body that absorbs all incident electromagnetic radiation regardless of frequency or angle of incidence The name black body is given because it absorbs all colors of light A black body also emits black body radiation In contrast a white body is one with a rough surface that reflects all incident rays completely and uniformly in all directions 1 A black body radiator used in CARLO laboratory in Poland It is an approximation of a model described by Planck s law utilized as a spectral irradiance standard As the temperature of a black body decreases its intensity also decreases and its peak moves to longer wavelengths Shown for comparison is the classical Rayleigh Jeans law and its ultraviolet catastrophe A black body in thermal equilibrium that is at a constant temperature emits electromagnetic black body radiation The radiation is emitted according to Planck s law meaning that it has a spectrum that is determined by the temperature alone see figure at right not by the body s shape or composition An ideal black body in thermal equilibrium has two main properties 2 It is an ideal emitter at every frequency it emits as much or more thermal radiative energy as any other body at the same temperature It is a diffuse emitter measured per unit area perpendicular to the direction the energy is radiated isotropically independent of direction An approximate realization of a black surface is a hole in the wall of a large insulated enclosure an oven for example Any light entering the hole is reflected or absorbed at the internal surfaces of the body and is unlikely to re emerge making the hole a nearly perfect absorber When the radiation confined in such an enclosure is in thermal equilibrium the radiation emitted from the hole will be as great as from any body at that equilibrium temperature further explanation needed Real materials emit energy at a fraction called the emissivity of black body energy levels By definition a black body in thermal equilibrium has an emissivity e 1 A source with a lower emissivity independent of frequency is often referred to as a gray body 3 4 Constructing black bodies with an emissivity as close to 1 as possible remains a topic of current interest 5 In astronomy the radiation from stars and planets is sometimes characterized in terms of an effective temperature the temperature of a black body that would emit the same total flux of electromagnetic energy Contents 1 Definition 2 Idealizations 2 1 Cavity with a hole 2 2 Transmission absorption and reflection 2 3 Kirchhoff s perfect black bodies 3 Realizations 3 1 Cavity with a hole 3 2 Near black materials 3 3 Stars and planets 3 4 Black holes 3 5 Cosmic microwave background radiation 4 Radiative cooling 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksDefinition EditThe idea of a black body originally was introduced by Gustav Kirchhoff in 1860 as follows the supposition that bodies can be imagined which for infinitely small thicknesses completely absorb all incident rays and neither reflect nor transmit any I shall call such bodies perfectly black or more briefly black bodies 6 A more modern definition drops the reference to infinitely small thicknesses 7 An ideal body is now defined called a blackbody A blackbody allows all incident radiation to pass into it no reflected energy and internally absorbs all the incident radiation no energy transmitted through the body This is true for radiation of all wavelengths and for all angles of incidence Hence the blackbody is a perfect absorber for all incident radiation 8 Idealizations EditThis section describes some concepts developed in connection with black bodies An approximate realization of a black body as a tiny hole in an insulated enclosure Cavity with a hole Edit A widely used model of a black surface is a small hole in a cavity with walls that are opaque to radiation 8 Radiation incident on the hole will pass into the cavity and is very unlikely to be re emitted if the cavity is large The hole is not quite a perfect black surface in particular if the wavelength of the incident radiation is greater than the diameter of the hole part will be reflected Similarly even in perfect thermal equilibrium the radiation inside a finite sized cavity will not have an ideal Planck spectrum for wavelengths comparable to or larger than the size of the cavity 9 Suppose the cavity is held at a fixed temperature T and the radiation trapped inside the enclosure is at thermal equilibrium with the enclosure The hole in the enclosure will allow some radiation to escape If the hole is small radiation passing in and out of the hole has negligible effect upon the equilibrium of the radiation inside the cavity This escaping radiation will approximate black body radiation that exhibits a distribution in energy characteristic of the temperature T and does not depend upon the properties of the cavity or the hole at least for wavelengths smaller than the size of the hole 9 See the figure in the Introduction for the spectrum as a function of the frequency of the radiation which is related to the energy of the radiation by the equation E hf with E energy h Planck s constant f frequency At any given time the radiation in the cavity may not be in thermal equilibrium but the second law of thermodynamics states that if left undisturbed it will eventually reach equilibrium 10 although the time it takes to do so may be very long 11 Typically equilibrium is reached by continual absorption and emission of radiation by material in the cavity or its walls 12 13 14 15 Radiation entering the cavity will be thermalized by this mechanism the energy will be redistributed until the ensemble of photons achieves a Planck distribution The time taken for thermalization is much faster with condensed matter present than with rarefied matter such as a dilute gas At temperatures below billions of Kelvin direct photon photon interactions 16 are usually negligible compared to interactions with matter 17 Photons are an example of an interacting boson gas 18 and as described by the H theorem 19 under very general conditions any interacting boson gas will approach thermal equilibrium Transmission absorption and reflection Edit A body s behavior with regard to thermal radiation is characterized by its transmission t absorption a and reflection r The boundary of a body forms an interface with its surroundings and this interface may be rough or smooth A nonreflecting interface separating regions with different refractive indices must be rough because the laws of reflection and refraction governed by the Fresnel equations for a smooth interface require a reflected ray when the refractive indices of the material and its surroundings differ 20 A few idealized types of behavior are given particular names An opaque body is one that transmits none of the radiation that reaches it although some may be reflected 21 22 That is t 0 and a r 1 A transparent body is one that transmits all the radiation that reaches it That is t 1 and a r 0 A grey body is one where a r and t are constant for all wavelengths This term also is used to mean a body for which a is temperature and wavelength independent A white body is one for which all incident radiation is reflected uniformly in all directions t 0 a 0 and r 1 For a black body t 0 a 1 and r 0 Planck offers a theoretical model for perfectly black bodies which he noted do not exist in nature besides their opaque interior they have interfaces that are perfectly transmitting and non reflective 23 Kirchhoff s perfect black bodies Edit Kirchhoff in 1860 introduced the theoretical concept of a perfect black body with a completely absorbing surface layer of infinitely small thickness but Planck noted some severe restrictions upon this idea Planck noted three requirements upon a black body the body must i allow radiation to enter but not reflect ii possess a minimum thickness adequate to absorb the incident radiation and prevent its re emission iii satisfy severe limitations upon scattering to prevent radiation from entering and bouncing back out As a consequence Kirchhoff s perfect black bodies that absorb all the radiation that falls on them cannot be realized in an infinitely thin surface layer and impose conditions upon scattering of the light within the black body that are difficult to satisfy 24 25 Realizations EditA realization of a black body refers to a real world physical embodiment Here are a few Cavity with a hole Edit In 1898 Otto Lummer and Ferdinand Kurlbaum published an account of their cavity radiation source 26 Their design has been used largely unchanged for radiation measurements to the present day It was a hole in the wall of a platinum box divided by diaphragms with its interior blackened with iron oxide It was an important ingredient for the progressively improved measurements that led to the discovery of Planck s law 27 28 A version described in 1901 had its interior blackened with a mixture of chromium nickel and cobalt oxides 29 See also Hohlraum Near black materials Edit There is interest in blackbody like materials for camouflage and radar absorbent materials for radar invisibility 30 31 They also have application as solar energy collectors and infrared thermal detectors As a perfect emitter of radiation a hot material with black body behavior would create an efficient infrared heater particularly in space or in a vacuum where convective heating is unavailable 32 They are also useful in telescopes and cameras as anti reflection surfaces to reduce stray light and to gather information about objects in high contrast areas for example observation of planets in orbit around their stars where blackbody like materials absorb light that comes from the wrong sources It has long been known that a lamp black coating will make a body nearly black An improvement on lamp black is found in manufactured carbon nanotubes Nano porous materials can achieve refractive indices nearly that of vacuum in one case obtaining average reflectance of 0 045 5 33 In 2009 a team of Japanese scientists created a material called nanoblack which is close to an ideal black body based on vertically aligned single walled carbon nanotubes This absorbs between 98 and 99 of the incoming light in the spectral range from the ultra violet to the far infrared regions 32 Other examples of nearly perfect black materials are super black prepared by chemically etching a nickel phosphorus alloy 34 vertically aligned carbon nanotube arrays like VantaBlack and flower carbon nanostructures 35 all absorb 99 9 of light or more Stars and planets Edit For more about the UBV color index see Photometric system An idealized view of the cross section of a star The photosphere contains photons of light nearly in thermal equilibrium and some escape into space as near black body radiation A star or planet often is modeled as a black body and electromagnetic radiation emitted from these bodies as black body radiation The figure shows a highly schematic cross section to illustrate the idea The photosphere of the star where the emitted light is generated is idealized as a layer within which the photons of light interact with the material in the photosphere and achieve a common temperature T that is maintained over a long period of time Some photons escape and are emitted into space but the energy they carry away is replaced by energy from within the star so that the temperature of the photosphere is nearly steady Changes in the core lead to changes in the supply of energy to the photosphere but such changes are slow on the time scale of interest here Assuming these circumstances can be realized the outer layer of the star is somewhat analogous to the example of an enclosure with a small hole in it with the hole replaced by the limited transmission into space at the outside of the photosphere With all these assumptions in place the star emits black body radiation at the temperature of the photosphere 36 Effective temperature of a black body compared with the B V and U B color index of main sequence and super giant stars in what is called a color color diagram 37 Using this model the effective temperature of stars is estimated defined as the temperature of a black body that yields the same surface flux of energy as the star If a star were a black body the same effective temperature would result from any region of the spectrum For example comparisons in the B blue or V visible range lead to the so called B V color index which increases the redder the star 38 with the Sun having an index of 0 648 0 006 39 Combining the U ultraviolet and the B indices leads to the U B index which becomes more negative the hotter the star and the more the UV radiation Assuming the Sun is a type G2 V star its U B index is 0 12 40 The two indices for two types of most common star sequences are compared in the figure diagram with the effective surface temperature of the stars if they were perfect black bodies There is a rough correlation For example for a given B V index measurement the curves of both most common sequences of star the main sequence and the supergiants lie below the corresponding black body U B index that includes the ultraviolet spectrum showing that both groupings of star emit less ultraviolet light than a black body with the same B V index It is perhaps surprising that they fit a black body curve as well as they do considering that stars have greatly different temperatures at different depths 41 For example the Sun has an effective temperature of 5780 K 42 which can be compared to the temperature of its photosphere the region generating the light which ranges from about 5000 K at its outer boundary with the chromosphere to about 9500 K at its inner boundary with the convection zone approximately 500 km 310 mi deep 43 Black holes Edit See also Hawking radiation A black hole is a region of spacetime from which nothing escapes Around a black hole there is a mathematically defined surface called an event horizon that marks the point of no return It is called black because it absorbs all the light that hits the horizon reflecting nothing making it almost an ideal black body 44 radiation with a wavelength equal to or larger than the diameter of the hole may not be absorbed so black holes are not perfect black bodies 45 Physicists believe that to an outside observer black holes have a non zero temperature and emit black body radiation radiation with a nearly perfect black body spectrum ultimately evaporating 46 The mechanism for this emission is related to vacuum fluctuations in which a virtual pair of particles is separated by the gravity of the hole one member being sucked into the hole and the other being emitted 47 The energy distribution of emission is described by Planck s law with a temperature T T ℏ c 3 8 p G k B M displaystyle T frac hbar c 3 8 pi Gk text B M where c is the speed of light ℏ is the reduced Planck constant kB is the Boltzmann constant G is the gravitational constant and M is the mass of the black hole 48 These predictions have not yet been tested either observationally or experimentally 49 Cosmic microwave background radiation Edit See also Big Bang and Cosmic microwave background radiation The Big Bang theory is based upon the cosmological principle which states that on large scales the Universe is homogeneous and isotropic According to theory the Universe approximately a second after its formation was a near ideal black body in thermal equilibrium at a temperature above 1010 K The temperature decreased as the Universe expanded and the matter and radiation in it cooled The cosmic microwave background radiation observed today is the most perfect black body ever measured in nature 50 It has a nearly ideal Planck spectrum at a temperature of about 2 7 K It departs from the perfect isotropy of true black body radiation by an observed anisotropy that varies with angle on the sky only to about one part in 100 000 Radiative cooling Edit Log log graphs of peak emission wavelength and radiant exitance vs black body temperature red arrows show that 5780 K black bodies have 501 nm peak wavelength and 63 3 MW m2 radiant exitance See also Radiative cooling and Radiosity heat transfer The integration of Planck s law over all frequencies provides the total energy per unit of time per unit of surface area radiated by a black body maintained at a temperature T and is known as the Stefan Boltzmann law P A s T 4 displaystyle P A sigma T 4 where s is the Stefan Boltzmann constant s 5 67 10 8 W m 2 K 4 51 To remain in thermal equilibrium at constant temperature T the black body must absorb or internally generate this amount of power P over the given area A The cooling of a body due to thermal radiation is often approximated using the Stefan Boltzmann law supplemented with a gray body emissivity e 1 P A esT4 The rate of decrease of the temperature of the emitting body can be estimated from the power radiated and the body s heat capacity 52 This approach is a simplification that ignores details of the mechanisms behind heat redistribution which may include changing composition phase transitions or restructuring of the body that occur within the body while it cools and assumes that at each moment in time the body is characterized by a single temperature It also ignores other possible complications such as changes in the emissivity with temperature 53 54 and the role of other accompanying forms of energy emission for example emission of particles like neutrinos 55 If a hot emitting body is assumed to follow the Stefan Boltzmann law and its power emission P and temperature T are known this law can be used to estimate the dimensions of the emitting object because the total emitted power is proportional to the area of the emitting surface In this way it was found that X ray bursts observed by astronomers originated in neutron stars with a radius of about 10 km rather than black holes as originally conjectured 56 An accurate estimate of size requires some knowledge of the emissivity particularly its spectral and angular dependence 57 See also EditKirchhoff s law of thermal radiation Vantablack a substance produced in 2014 and among the blackest known Planckian locus black body incandescence in a given chromaticity spaceReferences EditCitations Edit Planck 1914 pp 9 10 Mahmoud Massoud 2005 2 1 Blackbody radiation Engineering thermofluids thermodynamics fluid mechanics and heat transfer Springer p 568 ISBN 978 3 540 22292 7 The emissivity of a surface in principle depends upon frequency angle of view and temperature However by definition the radiation from a gray body is simply proportional to that of a black body at the same temperature so its emissivity does not depend upon frequency or equivalently wavelength See Massoud Kaviany 2002 Figure 4 3 b Behaviors of a gray no wavelength dependence diffuse no directional dependence and opaque no transmission surface Principles of heat transfer Wiley IEEE p 381 ISBN 978 0 471 43463 4 and Ronald G Driggers 2003 Encyclopedia of optical engineering Volume 3 CRC Press p 2303 ISBN 978 0 8247 4252 2 Some authors describe sources of infrared radiation with emissivity greater than approximately 0 99 as a black body See What is a Blackbody and Infrared Radiation Education Reference tab Electro Optical Industries Inc 2008 Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 10 June 2019 a b Chun Ai Lin 2008 Blacker than black Nature Nanotechnology doi 10 1038 nnano 2008 29 Translated by F Guthrie from Annalen der Physik 109 275 301 1860 G Kirchhoff July 1860 On the relation between the radiating and absorbing powers of different bodies for light and heat The London Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 20 130 The notion of an infinitely thin layer was dropped by Planck See Planck 1914 p 10 footnote 2 a b Siegel Robert Howell John R 2002 Thermal Radiation Heat Transfer Volume 1 4th ed Taylor amp Francis p 7 ISBN 978 1 56032 839 1 a b Corrections to the spectrum do arise related to boundary conditions at the walls curvature and topology particularly for wavelengths comparable to the cavity dimensions see Roger Dale Van Zee J Patrick Looney 2002 Cavity enhanced spectroscopies Academic Press p 202 ISBN 978 0 12 475987 9 Clement John Adkins 1983 4 1 The function of the second law Equilibrium thermodynamics 3rd ed Cambridge University Press p 50 ISBN 978 0 521 27456 2 In simple cases the approach to equilibrium is governed by a relaxation time In others the system may hang up in a metastable state as stated by Adkins 1983 on page 10 For another example see Michel Le Bellac Fabrice Mortessagne Ghassan George Batrouni 2004 Equilibrium and non equilibrium statistical thermodynamics Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 978 0521821438 The approach to thermal equilibrium of the radiation in the cavity can be catalyzed by adding a small piece of matter capable of radiating and absorbing at all frequencies See Peter Theodore Landsberg 1990 Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics Reprint of Oxford University Press 1978 ed Courier Dover Publications p 209 ISBN 978 0 486 66493 4 Planck 1914 p 44 52 Loudon 2000 Chapter 1 Mandel amp Wolf 1995 Chapter 13 Robert Karplus and Maurice Neuman The Scattering of Light by Light Phys Rev 83 776 784 1951 Ludwig Bergmann Clemens Schaefer Heinz Niedrig 1999 Optics of waves and particles Walter de Gruyter p 595 ISBN 978 3 11 014318 8 Because the interaction of the photons with each other is negligible a small amount of matter is necessary to establish thermodynamic equilibrium of heat radiation The fundamental bosons are the photon the vector bosons of the weak interaction the gluon and the graviton See Allan Griffin D W Snoke S Stringari 1996 Bose Einstein condensation Cambridge University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 521 58990 1 Richard Chace Tolman 2010 103 Change of H with time as a result of collisions The principles of statistical mechanics Reprint of 1938 Oxford University Press ed Dover Publications pp 455 ff ISBN 978 0 486 63896 6 we can define a suitable quantity H to characterize the condition of a gas which will exhibit a tendency to decrease with time as a result of collisions unless the distribution of the molecules is already that of equilibrium p 458 Paul A Tipler 1999 Relative intensity of reflected and transmitted light Physics for Scientists and Engineers Parts 1 35 Part 39 4th ed Macmillan p 1044 ISBN 978 0 7167 3821 3 Massoud Kaviany 2002 Figure 4 3 b Radiation properties of an opaque surface Principles of heat transfer Wiley IEEE p 381 ISBN 978 0 471 43463 4 BA Venkanna 2010 10 3 4 Absorptivity reflectivity and transmissivity Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer PHI Learning Pvt Ltd pp 385 386 ISBN 978 81 203 4031 2 Planck 1914 p 10 Planck 1914 pp 9 10 10 Kirchhoff 1860c Lummer amp Kurlbaum 1898 An extensive historical discussion is found in Mehra Jagdish Rechenberg Helmut 2000 The historical development of quantum theory Springer pp 39 ff ISBN 978 0 387 95174 4 Kangro 1976 p 159 Lummer amp Kurlbaum 1901 CF Lewis June 1988 Materials keep a low profile PDF Mech Eng 37 41 permanent dead link Bradley Quinn 2010 Textile Futures Berg p 68 ISBN 978 1 84520 807 3 a b K Mizuno et al 2009 A black body absorber from vertically aligned single walled carbon nanotubes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 15 6044 6077 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 6044M doi 10 1073 pnas 0900155106 PMC 2669394 PMID 19339498 Zu Po Yang et al 2008 Experimental observation of an extremely dark material made by a low density nanotube array Nano Letters 8 2 446 451 Bibcode 2008NanoL 8 446Y doi 10 1021 nl072369t PMID 18181658 S2CID 7412160 See description of work by Richard Brown and his colleagues at the UK s National Physical Laboratory Mick Hamer 6 February 2003 Mini craters key to blackest ever black New Scientist Ghai Viney Singh Harpreet Agnihotri Prabhat K 2019 Dandelion Like Carbon Nanotubes for Near Perfect Black Surfaces ACS Applied Nano Materials 2 12 7951 7956 doi 10 1021 acsanm 9b01950 S2CID 213017898 Simon F Green Mark H Jones S Jocelyn Burnell 2004 An introduction to the sun and stars Cambridge University Press pp 21 22 53 ISBN 978 0 521 54622 5 A source in which photons are much more likely to interact with the material within the source than to escape is a condition for the formation of a black body spectrum Figure modeled after E Bohm Vitense 1989 Figure 4 9 Introduction to Stellar Astrophysics Basic stellar observations and data Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 521 34869 0 David H Kelley Eugene F Milone Anthony F FRW Aveni 2011 Exploring Ancient Skies A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy 2nd ed Springer p 52 ISBN 978 1 4419 7623 9 David F Gray February 1995 Comparing the sun with other stars along the temperature coordinate Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 107 120 123 Bibcode 1995PASP 107 120G doi 10 1086 133525 M Golay 1974 Table IX U B Indices Introduction to astronomical photometry Springer p 82 ISBN 978 90 277 0428 3 Lawrence Hugh Aller 1991 Atoms stars and nebulae 3rd ed Cambridge University Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 521 31040 6 Kenneth R Lang 2006 Astrophysical formulae Volume 1 3rd ed Birkhauser p 23 ISBN 978 3 540 29692 8 B Bertotti Paolo Farinella David Vokrouhlicky 2003 Figure 9 2 The temperature profile in the solar atmosphere New Views of the Solar System Springer p 248 ISBN 978 1 4020 1428 4 Schutz Bernard 2004 Gravity From the Group Up An Introductory Guide to Gravity and General Relativity 1st ed Cambridge University Press p 304 ISBN 978 0 521 45506 0 PCW Davies 1978 Thermodynamics of black holes PDF Rep Prog Phys 41 8 1313 1355 Bibcode 1978RPPh 41 1313D doi 10 1088 0034 4885 41 8 004 S2CID 250916407 Archived from the original PDF on 10 May 2013 Robert M Wald 2005 The thermodynamics of black holes In Andres Gomberoff Donald Marolf eds Lectures on quantum gravity Springer Science amp Business Media pp 1 38 ISBN 978 0 387 23995 8 Bernard J Carr amp Steven B Giddings 2008 Chapter 6 Quantum black holes Beyond Extreme Physics Cutting edge science Rosen Publishing Group Scientific American COR p 30 ISBN 978 1 4042 1402 6 Valeri P Frolov Andrei Zelnikov 2011 Equation 9 7 1 Introduction to Black Hole Physics Oxford University Press p 321 ISBN 978 0 19 969229 3 Robert M Wald 2005 The thermodynamics of black holes pp 1 38 In Andres Gomberoff Donald Marolf eds Lectures on Quantum Gravity Springer Science amp Business Media p 28 ISBN 978 0 387 23995 8 no results on black hole thermodynamics have been subject to any experimental or observational tests White M 1999 Anisotropies in the CMB PDF Proceedings of the Los Angeles Meeting DPF 99 UCLA See also arXive org 2018 CODATA Value Stefan Boltzmann constant The NIST Reference on Constants Units and Uncertainty NIST 20 May 2019 Retrieved 20 May 2019 A simple example is provided by Srivastava M K 2011 Cooling by radiation The Person Guide to Objective Physics for the IIT JEE Pearson Education India p 610 ISBN 978 81 317 5513 6 M Vollmer K P Mollmann 2011 Figure 1 38 Some examples for temperature dependence of emissivity for different materials Infrared Thermal Imaging Fundamentals Research and Applications John Wiley amp Sons p 45 ISBN 978 3 527 63087 5 Robert Osiander M Ann Garrison Darrin John Champion 2006 MEMS and Microstructures in aerospace applications CRC Press p 187 ISBN 978 0 8247 2637 9 Krishna Rajagopal Frank Wilczek 2001 6 2 Coling by Neutrino Emissions pp 2135 2136 The Condensed Matter Physics of QCD In Mikhail A Shifman ed At The Frontier of Particle Physics Handbook of QCD On the occasion of the 75th birthday of Professor Boris Ioffe Vol 3 Singapore World Scientific pp 2061 2151 arXiv hep ph 0011333v2 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 344 2269 doi 10 1142 9789812810458 0043 ISBN 978 981 02 4969 4 S2CID 13606600 For the first 105 6 years of its life the cooling of a neutron star is governed by the balance between heat capacity and the loss of heat by neutrino emission Both the specific heat CV and the neutrino emission rate Ln are dominated by physics within T of the Fermi surface The star will cool rapidly until its interior temperature is T lt Tc at which time the quark matter core will become inert and the further cooling history will be dominated by neutrino emission from the nuclear matter fraction of the star Walter Lewin Warren Goldstein 2011 X ray bursters For the love of physics Simon and Schuster pp 251 ff ISBN 978 1 4391 0827 7 TE Strohmayer 2006 Neutron star structure and fundamental physics In John W Mason ed Astrophysics update Volume 2 Birkhauser p 41 ISBN 978 3 540 30312 1 Bibliography Edit Chandrasekhar S 1950 Radiative Transfer Oxford University Press Goody R M Yung Y L 1989 Atmospheric Radiation Theoretical Basis 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510291 8 Hermann A 1971 The Genesis of Quantum Theory Nash C W transl MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 08047 7 a translation of Fruhgeschichte der Quantentheorie 1899 1913 Physik Verlag Mosbach Baden Kangro H 1976 Early History of Planck s Radiation Law Taylor and Francis ISBN 978 0 85066 063 0 Kirchhoff G 1860a Uber die Fraunhofer schen Linien Monatsberichte der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 662 665 Kirchhoff G 1860b Uber den Zusammenhang zwischen Emission und Absorption von Licht und Warme Monatsberichte der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 783 787 Kirchhoff G 1860c Ueber das Verhaltniss zwischen dem Emissionsvermogen und dem Absorptionsvermogen der Korper fur Warme and Licht Annalen der Physik und Chemie 109 2 275 301 Bibcode 1860AnP 185 275K doi 10 1002 andp 18601850205 Translated by Guthrie F as Kirchhoff G 1860 On the relation between the radiating and absorbing powers of different bodies for light and heat Philosophical Magazine Series 4 20 1 21 Kirchhoff G 1882 1862 Ueber das Verhaltniss zwischen dem Emissionsvermogen und dem Absorptionsvermogen der Korper fur Warme und Licht Gessamelte Abhandlungen Leipzig Johann Ambrosius Barth pp 571 598 Kondepudi D Prigogine I 1998 Modern Thermodynamics From Heat Engines to Dissipative Structures John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 97393 5 Kragh H 1999 Quantum Generations a History of Physics in the Twentieth Century Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01206 3 Kuhn T S 1978 Black Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 502383 1 Loudon R 2000 1973 The Quantum Theory of Light third ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 19 850177 0 Lummer O Kurlbaum F 1898 Der electrisch gegluhte absolut schwarze Korper und seine Temperaturmessung Verhandlungen der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft 17 106 111 Lummer O Kurlbaum F 1901 Der elektrisch gegluhte schwarze Korper Annalen der Physik 310 8 829 836 Bibcode 1901AnP 310 829L doi 10 1002 andp 19013100809 Mandel L Wolf E 1995 Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 41711 2 Mehra J Rechenberg H 1982 The Historical Development of Quantum Theory Vol 1 part 1 Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90642 3 Mihalas D Weibel Mihalas B 1984 Foundations of Radiation Hydrodynamics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 503437 0 Milne E A 1930 Thermodynamics of the Stars Handbuch der Astrophysik 3 part 1 63 255 Planck M 1914 The Theory of Heat Radiation Masius M transl 2nd ed P Blakiston s Son amp Co OL 7154661M Rybicki G B Lightman A P 1979 Radiative Processes in Astrophysics John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 82759 7 Schirrmacher A 2001 Experimenting theory the proofs of Kirchhoff s radiation law before and after Planck Munchner Zentrum fur Wissenschafts und Technikgeschichte Stewart B 1858 An account of some experiments on radiant heat Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 22 1 20 doi 10 1017 S0080456800031288 S2CID 122316368 External links EditKeesey Lori J 12 December 2010 Blacker than black NASA Engineers now developing a blacker than pitch material that will help scientists gather hard to obtain scientific measurements nanotech based material now being developed by a team of 10 technologists at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black body amp oldid 1128945692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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