Infrared astronomy is the branch of astronomy and astrophysics which deals with objects visible in infrared (IR) radiation. Visible radiation ranges from 400 nm (blue) to 700 nm (red). Longer wavelengths than 700 nm but still shorter than microwaves are called infrared (or sometimes submillimeter waves).
Scientists classify infrared astronomy as part of optical astronomy because optical components (mirrors, lenses and solid state digital detectors) are usually used.
After the use of prisms by Isaac Newton to split white light into a spectrum, it was found in 1800 by William Herschel that the hottest part of the band of light from the Sun was actually past the red end of the spectrum. These "heat rays" even displayed some spectral lines. Charles Piazzi Smyth in 1856 detected infrared radiation in the light of the Moon.
Near infrared radiation (infrared radiation with wavelengths close to that of visible light) behaves in a very similar way to visible light, and can be detected using similar electronic devices. For this reason, the near infrared region of the spectrum is commonly incorporated as part of the "optical" spectrum, along with the near ultraviolet (most scientific instruments such as optical telescopes cover the near-infrared as well as the visible). The far infrared extends to submillimeter wavelengths, which are observed by telescopes such as the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope at Mauna Kea Observatory.
Like all other forms of electromagnetic radiation, infrared is utilised by astronomers to learn more about the universe. As infrared is essentially heat radiation, infrared telescopes (which include most major optical telescopes as well as a few dedicated infrared telescopes) need to have their detectors shielded from heat and chilled with liquid nitrogen in order to actually form images. This is particularly important in the mid infrared and far infrared regions of the spectrum. The principle limitation on infrared sensitivity from ground-based telescopes is the water vapour in the Earth's atmosphere, which absorbs a lot of infrared radiation. For this reason most infrared telescopes are built in very dry places at high altitude (above most of the water vapour in the atmosphere). Suitable locations on Earth include Mauna Kea Observatory at 4205 meters above sea level, the ALMA site at 5000 m in Chile and regions of high altitude ice-desert such as Dome C in Antarctic.
However, as with visible-light telescopes, space is the ideal place for their use and most optical telescopes launched into space (such as the Hubble Space Telescope) can also perform infrared observations. The recently launched Spitzer Space Telescope is dedicated solely to infrared observations.
The highest resolution infrared observations are performed by ground-based astronomical interferometers.
The cheapest infrared detectors commonly used at research telescopes are HgCdTe arrays. These operate well between 1 and 5 micrometre wavelengths. For longer wavelength observations or higher sensitivity other detectors may be used, including other narrow gap semiconductor detectors, low temperature bolometer arrays or photon-counting Superconducting Tunnel Junction arrays.
Special requirements for infrared astronomy include: very low dark currents to allow long integration times, associated low noise readout circuits and sometimes very high pixel counts.
| Wavelength range | Astronomical bands | Telescopes |
|---|---|---|
| (micrometres) | ||
| 0.65 to 1.0 | R and I bands | All major optical telescopes |
| 1.25 | J band | Most major optical telescopes and most dedicated infrared telescopes |
| 1.65 | H band | Most major optical telescopes and most dedicated infrared telescopes |
| 2.2 | K band | Most major optical telescopes and most dedicated infrared telescopes |
| 3.45 | L band | Most dedicated infrared telescopes and some optical telescopes |
| 4.7 | M band | Most dedicated infrared telescopes and some optical telescopes |
| 10 | N band | Most dedicated infrared telescopes and some optical telescopes |
| 20 | Q band | Some dedicated infrared telescopes and some optical telescopes |
| 450 | submillimeter | Submillimeter telescopes |
Between these windows there are generally regions where infrared observations are more difficult or impossible from the ground due to the opacity of the atmosphere. Dedicated infrared and submillimeter telescopes are generally built at very high altitude sites like Mauna Kea Observatory, Hawaii and the ALMA site in Chile, or even flown on aircraft like SOFIA, providing the best sensitivity available from Earth based observatories. Data from space-based observatories like Spitzer, IRAS and ISO help fill in the gaps between the atmospheric windows listed above.
Astronomical imaging | Observational astronomy | Infrared imaging
Infrarotastronomie | Astronomía infrarroja | Astronomia dell'infrarosso | Infrapunatähtitiede
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