Bolometer

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Rendition of an imaging bolometer from Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Rendition of an imaging bolometer from Los Alamos National Laboratory

A bolometer is a device for measuring incident electromagnetic radiation. It was invented in 1878 by the American astronomer Samuel Pierpont Langley.

It consists of an "absorber" connected to a heat sink (area of constant temperature) through an insulating link. The result is that any radiation absorbed by the absorber raises its temperature above that of the heat sink—the higher the power absorbed, the higher the temperature will be.

A thermometer of some kind, attached to the absorber, is used to measure the temperature, from which the absorbed power can be calculated. In some designs the thermometer is also the absorber; in others the absorber and thermometer are separate; this is known as "composite design".

While bolometers can be used to measure radiation of any frequency, for most wavelength ranges there are other methods of detection that are more sensitive. However, for sub-millimetre wavelengths (from around 200 µm to 1 mm wavelength), the bolometer is the most sensitive type of detector for any measurement over more than a very narrow wavelength range.

Bolometers are therefore used for astronomy at these wavelengths. However, to achieve the best sensitivity, they must be cooled down to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero (typically from 50 millikelvins to 300 mK); this makes their operation technically somewhat challenging.

The term bolometer is also used in high-energy physics (particle physics) to designate an unconventional particle detector. They use the same principle described above. The bolometers are sensitive not only to light but to every form of energy.

More conventional particle detectors are often sensitive to ionization effect of ionizating particles. Bolometer are almost directly sensitive to the energy left inside the absorber. For this reason they can be used not only for ionizating particles and photons, but also for non-ionizing particles, for any sort of radiation and even to search for unknown forms of mass or energy (like dark matter). They are very slow and have a high dead time. They completely lack of any sort of discrimination. On the other hand, compared to more conventional particle detectors, they are extremely efficient in energy resolution and in sensitivity. They can be used to test very high radio-purity. They are also known as thermal detectors.

The operating principle is similar to that of a calorimeter in thermodynamics. However, the approximations, ultra low temperature, and the different purpose of the device make the operational use rather different. In the jargon of high energy physics, these devices are not called calorimeters since this term is already used for a different type of detector (see Calorimeter (particle physics)).

Their use as particle detectors is still at the developmental stage. Their use as particle detectors was proposed from the beginning of the 20th century, but the first regular, though pioneering, use was only in the 1980s because of the difficulty associated with having a system at cryogenic temperature.

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[edit] Langley's bolometer

The first bolometer used for infrared observatons by Langley had a very basic design: It consisted of two platinum strips, covered with lampblack, one strip was shielded from the radiation and one exposed to it. The strips formed two branches of a wheatstone bridge which was fitted with a sensitive galvanometer and connected to a battery.

Electromagnetic radiation falling on the exposed strip would heat it, and change its resistance, the circuit thus effectively operating as a resistance temperature detector.

[edit] Microbolometers

Main article: Microbolometer

A microbolometer is a specific type of bolometer used as a detector in a thermal camera. It is a grid of vanadium oxide or amorphous silicon heat sensors atop a corresponding grid of silicon. Infrared radiation from a specific range of wavelengths strikes the vanadium oxide and changes its electrical resistance. This resistance change is measured and processed into temperatures which can be represented graphically. The microbolometer grid is commonly found in two sizes, a 320×240 array or less expensive 160×120 array. Both arrays provide the same resolution with the larger array providing a wider field of view. Larger, 640×480 arrays were announced in 2005.

[edit] References

  • Knoll, Glenn F. (2000). Radiation Detection and Measurement, 3rd edition, New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-07338-5.
  • McCammon, D., et al. (March 1993). "Thermal calorimeters for high resolution X-ray spectroscopy". Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research, Section A (Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated) A326 (1-2): 157-165.

[edit] External links