Abstract :
Usually one wants to measure the thermal radiance emitted by a hotsurface
at a wavelength as short as possible, since the uncertainty in the
true temperature due to unknown emissivity decreases with decreasing wavelength.
Unfortunately the radiance also decreases with decreasing wavelength,
and hence the signal-to-noise ratio becomes worse with shorter wavelengths.
Depending on what temperature range is to be covered, a reasonable compromise
can be found for most applications. When pyrometry is applied to
shock physics experiments, there is an additional factor that has to be taken
into consideration. Due to the nature of shock physics experiments, one has
to deal with background light caused by flashes from air lighting up, highexplosive
light, and muzzle flash from a powder gun, etc. In addition, even
if the experiment is designed appropriately, there is often a temperature nonuniformity
as well as thermal radiation from transparent anvils that are used
to increase the iInterface pressure. In most cases, there is no engineering
approach to minimize these temperature non-uniformities. The sensitivity to
these non-uniformities increases with decreasing wavelength for the very same
reason that the sensitivity to uncertainties in emissivity is increasing. This
paper describes the above problems, deals with the problem of temperature
non-uniformity in detail, and presents arguments why single-wavelength pyrometry
in shock physics experiments can be very deceiving even in well designed
experiments.
Keywords :
Blackbody radiation , Infrared , shock physics. , Pyrometry