The electromagnetic
spectrum includes gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet, visible,
infrared, microwaves, and radio waves. The only difference
between these different types of radiation is their
wavelength or frequency. Wavelength increases and
frequency (as well as energy and temperature) decreases
from gamma rays to radio waves. All of these forms of
radiation travel at the speed of light (186,000 miles
or 300,000,000 meters per second in a vacuum). In addition
to visible light, radio, some infrared and a very small
amount of ultraviolet radiation also reaches the Earth's
surface from space. Fortunately for us, our atmosphere
blocks out the rest, much of which is very hazardous,
if not deadly, for life on Earth.
Infrared radiation lies between the visible and microwave
portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. Infrared waves
have wavelengths longer than visible and shorter than
microwaves, and have frequencies which are lower than
visible and higher than microwaves. Infrared is broken
into three categories: near,
mid and far-infrared. Near-infrared refers to the
part of the infrared spectrum that is closest to visible
light and far-infrared refers to the part that is closer
to the microwave region. Mid-infrared is the region between
these two. |