Physics, asked by SpellreacterRE3101, 11 months ago

What are the three properties of heat radiations?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Radiation is the mode of heat transfer or in general, energy transfer by electromagnetic waves/quanta. Thermal radiation or heat radiation is the radiation produced by thermal agitation of the particles of a body, and its spectrum, ie., frequency distribution or wavelength distribution, is continuous from the far infrared to the extreme ultraviolet region depending on the temperature of the body.

Properties

(1) Thermal radiations are electromagnetic waves/quanta extending from the far infrared to the extreme ultraviolet region. In this spectrum, the infrared waves (wavelengths ranging from about 700 mm to about 1 mm) are sensed as heat.

(2) They have the same speed in free space as that of light, nearly 3 x 10^8 m/s, which makes radiation the most rapid mode of heat transfer

(3) They exhibit all the optical phenomena of light, viz, reflection, absorption, refraction, interference, diffraction and polarization.

(4) Radiation incident on a body is, in general, partly reflected, partly absorbed and partly transmitted.

(5) Thermal radiation obeys the inverse-square law of intensity, ie., the intensity at a point is inversely proportional to the square of its distance from a point source of radiation.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Radiation is the mode of heat transfer or in general,

energy transfer by electromagnetic waves/quanta.

Thermal radiation or heat radiation is the radiation

produced by thermal agitation of the particles ofa

body, and its spectrum, ie., frequency distribution

or wavelength distribution, is continuous from the far infrared to the extreme ultraviolet region

depending on the temperature of the body.

Properties

(1) Thermal radiations are electromagnetic waves/

quanta extending from the far infrared to the ex

treme ultraviolet region. In this spectrum, the in-

frared waves (wavelengths ranging from about 700

nm to about 1 mm) are sensed as heat.

(2) They have the same speed in free space as that of

light, nearly 3 x 10 m/s, which makes radia-tion

the most rapid mode of heat transfer

(3) They exhibit all the optical phenomena of light, viz,

reflection, absorption, refraction, interference, dif-

fraction and polarization.

(4) Radiation incident on a body is, in general, partly

reflected, partly absorbed and partly transmitted.

(5) Thermal radiation obeys the inverse-square law of

intensity, ie., the intensity at a point is inversely

proportional to the square of its distance from a

point source of radiation.

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