What Is Terahertz
What Is Terahertz
What Is Terahertz
MY NOTE: THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION, WAS COPIED FROM A VARIETY OF SOURCES, MOST
NOTABLY WIKIPEDIA, AND SEVERAL COMPANY WEBPAGES, AND FUSED TOGETHER.
Terahertz radiation, is part of your daily world already. You cant escape exposure to it. Both mid-infrared
and terahertz radiations are ubiquitous since they are significant part of blackbody radiation from any
objects (including human bodies and cars etc.) around room
temperature. http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/chen/
You receive much more artificial THz exposure from the light-bulb in your
house, or from other warm objects in the ambient environment, than from the
weak exposure for a short period of time from current THz scanners,
Medical imaging:
Terahertz radiation is non-ionizing, and thus is not expected to damage tissues and DNA, unlike X-rays.
Some frequencies of terahertz radiation can penetrate several millimeters of tissue with low water content
(e.g. fatty tissue) and reflect back. Terahertz radiation can also detect differences in water content and
density of a tissue. Such methods could allow effective detection of epithelial cancer with a safer and less
invasive or painful system using imaging.
Some frequencies of terahertz radiation can be used for 3D imaging of teeth and may be more accurate
and safer than conventional X-ray imaging in dentistry.
Security:
Terahertz radiation can penetrate fabrics and plastics, so it can be used in surveillance, such as security
screening, to uncover concealed weapons on a person, remotely. This is of particular interest because
many materials of interest have unique spectral "fingerprints" in the terahertz range. This offers the
possibility to combine spectral identification with imaging. Passive detection of Terahertz signatures
avoid the bodily privacy concerns of other detection by being targeted to a very specific range of materials
and objects.[5][6]
Scientific use and imaging:
Spectroscopy in terahertz radiation could provide novel information in chemistry and biochemistry.
Recently developed methods of THz time-domain spectroscopy (THz TDS) and THz tomography have
been shown to be able to perform measurements on, and obtain images of, samples which are opaque in
the visible and near-infrared regions of the spectrum. The utility of THz-TDS is limited when the sample
is very thin, or has a low absorbance, since it is very difficult to distinguish changes in the THz pulse
caused by the sample from those caused by long term fluctuations in the driving laser source or
experiment. However, THz-TDS produces radiation that is both coherent and spectrally broad, so such
images can contain far more information than a conventional image formed with a single-frequency
source.
A primary use of submillimeter waves in physics is the study of condensed matter in high magnetic fields,
since at high fields (over about 15 teslas), the Larmor frequencies are in the submillimeter band. Many
high-magnetic field laboratories perform this work, such as the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
(NHMFL) in Florida.
Submillimetre astronomy.
Terahertz radiation could let art historians see murals hidden beneath coats of plaster or paint in
centuries-old building, without harming the artwork.[7]
Communication:
Potential uses exist in high-altitude telecommunications, above altitudes where water vapor causes signal
absorption: aircraft to satellite, or satellite to satellite.
Manufacturing:
Many possible uses of terahertz sensing and imaging are proposed in manufacturing, quality control, and
process monitoring. These generally exploit the traits of plastics and cardboard being transparent to
terahertz radiation, making it possible to inspect packaged goods.
Despite many valuable useful applications, the adoption of terahertz waves has been slow because of the
limited output power from currently available sources. Terahertz waves lie between the optical and the
microwave spectrum and cannot be efficiently generated by either scaling down optical sources like lasers
or scaling up conventional microwave sources such as klystrons. Current moderate size terahertz sources
can only generate a few milliwatts of average power and hence most require expensive and complicated
schemes for detection. Therefore, the lack of commercially available sources and detector for this
frequency region, other than the Advanced Photonix, T-4000, and the Bridge12 gyrotron, lead to what
some have called the "Terahertz Gap".