Electromagnetic Spectrum
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Electromagnetic Spectrum
The electromagnetic spectrum is the range of all possible frequencies of electromagnetic radiation.[4] The
electromagnetic spectrum of an object has a dierent meaning, and is instead the characteristic distribution
of electromagnetic radiation emitted or absorbed by that
particular object.
(invisible light rays that induced certain chemical reactions). These behaved similarly to visible violet light rays,
but were beyond them in the spectrum.[8] They were later
renamed ultraviolet radiation.
Electromagnetic radiation had been rst linked to electromagnetism in 1845, when Michael Faraday noticed that
the polarization of light traveling through a transparent
material responded to a magnetic eld (see Faraday effect). During the 1860s James Maxwell developed four
partial dierential equations for the electromagnetic eld.
Two of these equations predicted the possibility of, and
behavior of, waves in the eld. Analyzing the speed of
these theoretical waves, Maxwell realized that they must
travel at a speed that was about the known speed of light.
This startling coincidence in value led Maxwell to make
the inference that light itself is a type of electromagnetic
wave.
Maxwells equations predicted an innite number of frequencies of electromagnetic waves, all traveling at the
speed of light. This was the rst indication of the existence of the entire electromagnetic spectrum.
Maxwells predicted waves included waves at very low
frequencies compared to infrared, which in theory might
be created by oscillating charges in an ordinary electrical
circuit of a certain type. Attempting to prove Maxwells
equations and detect such low frequency electromagnetic
radiation, in 1886 the physicist Heinrich Hertz built an
apparatus to generate and detect what is now called radio
waves. Hertz found the waves and was able to infer (by
measuring their wavelength and multiplying it by their
frequency) that they traveled at the speed of light. Hertz
also demonstrated that the new radiation could be both
reected and refracted by various dielectric media, in the
same manner as light. For example, Hertz was able to
focus the waves using a lens made of tree resin. In a
later experiment, Hertz similarly produced and measured
the properties of microwaves. These new types of waves
paved the way for inventions such as the wireless telegraph and the radio.
4 TYPES OF RADIATION
4 Types of radiation
4.1 Boundaries
f=
c
,
or f =
E
,
h
or E =
hc
,
where:
c = 299792458 m/s is the speed of light in a vacuum
h
=
6.62606896(33)1034
Js
=
4.13566733(10)1015 eVs is Plancks constant.[9]
A discussion of the regions (or bands or types) of the electromagnetic spectrum is given below. Note that there
are no precisely dened boundaries between the bands
of the electromagnetic spectrum; rather they fade into
each other like the bands in a rainbow (which is the subspectrum of visible light). Radiation of each frequency
and wavelength (or in each band) has a mix of properties of the two regions of the spectrum that bound it. For
example, red light resembles infrared radiation in that it
can excite and add energy to some chemical bonds and
indeed must do so to power the chemical mechanisms responsible for photosynthesis and the working of the visual
system.
Radio frequency
3
radio waves at 60 Hz may be received and studied by
astronomers, or may be ducted along wires as electric
power, although the latter is, in the strict sense, not electromagnetic radiation at all (see near and far eld).
Wavelength
Frequency (Hz)
4.3
Gamma-rays
0.1
1019
1
0.1 nm
1018
400 nm
X-rays
1 nm
1017
10 nm
1016
500 nm
Ultraviolet
100 nm
1015
Visible
Near IR
1014
1000 nm
1 m
600 nm
10 m
Infra-red
1013
Thermal IR
100 m
700 nm
1012
Far IR
1000 MHz
1011
UHF
1 cm
Microwaves
1010
500 MHz
1000 m
1 mm
Radar
10 cm
109
1m
VHF
7-13
100 MHz
108
Radio, TV
10 m
FM
107
VHF
2-6
100 m
50 MHz
106
AM
1000 m
Long-waves
Radiation Type
Wavelength (m)
Radio
103
Microwave
102
Infrared
105
Visible
0.5106
Ultraviolet
108
X-ray
1010
Gamma ray
1012
Approximate Scale
of Wavelength
Buildings
Humans
Molecules
Atoms
Atomic Nuclei
Frequency (Hz)
10 4
Temperature of
objects at which
this radiation is the
most intense
wavelength emitted
1012
10 8
1K
272 C
100 K
173 C
1015
10,000 K
9,727 C
1016
1018
1020
10,000,000 K
~10,000,000 C
4. Visible radiation
5. Infrared radiation
6. Terahertz radiation
7. Microwave radiation
8. Radio waves
This classication goes in the increasing order of wavelength, which is characteristic of the type of radiation.[6]
While, in general, the classication scheme is accurate,
in reality there is often some overlap between neighboring types of electromagnetic energy. For example, SLF
4 TYPES OF RADIATION
Microwaves
Main article: Infrared radiation
Visible light
observable
from Earth,
with some
atmospheric
distortion.
Atmospheric
opacity
100 %
Most of the
infrared spectrum
absorbed by
atmospheric
gasses (best
observed
from space).
Long-wavelength
radio waves
blocked.
50 %
0%
0.1 nm
1 nm
10 nm
100 nm
1 m
10 m
100 m
1 mm
1 cm
10 cm
1m
10 m
100 m
1 km
Wavelength
4.9
Altitude (km)
UV-a
60
UV-b
UV-c
4.7
X-rays
Stratopause
40
20
Tropopause
10
20
Ozone (DU/km)
30
40
4.9 X-rays
4.8
Ultraviolet radiation
See also
Bandplan
Cosmic ray
Digital dividend after digital television transition
Electroencephalography
Infrared window
Ionizing radiation
List of international common standards
Optical window
Ozone layer
Radiant energy
Radiation
Radio window
Spectroscopy
V band
W band
[10] Condon, J. J. and Ransom, S. M. Essential Radio Astronomy: Pulsar Properties. National Radio Astronomy
Observatory. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
Re-
[17] Advanced weapon systems using lethal Short-pulse terahertz radiation from high-intensity-laser-produced plasmas. India Daily. March 6, 2005. Retrieved 2010-0927.
[18] Reference Solar Spectral Irradiance: Air Mass 1.5. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
[19] Koontz, Steve (26 June 2012) Designing Spacecraft and
Mission Operations Plans to Meet Flight Crew Radiation Dose. NASA/MIT Workshop. See pages I-7 (atmosphere) and I-23 (for water).
[20] Uses of Electromagnetic Waves | gcse-revision, physics,
waves, uses-electromagnetic-waves | Revision World
External links
UnwantedEmissions.com (U.S. radio spectrum allocations resource)
Australian Radiofrequency Spectrum Allocations
Chart (from Australian Communications and Media
Authority)
Canadian Table of Frequency Allocations (from
Industry Canada)
8.1
Text
8.2
8.2
Images
Images
File:Atmospheric_electromagnetic_opacity.svg Source:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/Atmospheric_
electromagnetic_opacity.svg License: Public domain Contributors: Vectorized by User:Mysid in Inkscape, original NASA image from
File:Atmospheric electromagnetic transmittance or opacity.jpg. Original artist: NASA (original); SVG by Mysid.
File:Bar_magnet.jpg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d8/Bar_magnet.jpg License: CC-BY-SA-3.0 Contributors: ? Original artist: ?
File:Colouring_pencils.jpg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b1/Colouring_pencils.jpg License: CC BY-SA
3.0 Contributors: Own work Original artist: MichaelMaggs
File:Commons-logo.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg License: ? Contributors: ? Original
artist: ?
File:EM_Spectrum_Properties_edit.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cf/EM_Spectrum_Properties_
edit.svg License: CC-BY-SA-3.0 Contributors:
Based o of File:EM_Spectrum3-new.jpg by NASA Original artist: Inductiveload, NASA
File:Electromagnetic-Spectrum.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/Electromagnetic-Spectrum.svg
License: CC BY-SA 3.0 Contributors: SVG version of File:Electromagnetic-Spectrum.png Original artist: Victor Blacus
File:Folder_Hexagonal_Icon.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/48/Folder_Hexagonal_Icon.svg License: Cc-bysa-3.0 Contributors: ? Original artist: ?
File:Nuvola_apps_ksim.png Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8d/Nuvola_apps_ksim.png License: LGPL
Contributors: http://icon-king.com Original artist: David Vignoni / ICON KING
File:Ozone_altitude_UV_graph.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cb/Ozone_altitude_UV_graph.svg
License: Public domain Contributors: [1]
<a href='//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ozone_altitude_UV_graph.jpg' class='image'><img alt='Ozone altitude UV graph.jpg'
src='https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/db/Ozone_altitude_UV_graph.jpg'
width='504'
height='380'
data-lewidth='504' data-le-height='380' /></a> Original artist: NASA
File:Portal-puzzle.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/fd/Portal-puzzle.svg License: Public domain Contributors: ?
Original artist: ?
File:Telecom-icon.svg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4e/Telecom-icon.svg License: Public domain Contributors: ? Original artist: ?
8.3
Content license