Black-body radiation
Planck's blackbody equation describes the spectral exitance of an ideal blackbody.
where:
Symbol | Units | Description |
---|---|---|
Input wavelength | ||
Input temperature | ||
Planck's constant | ||
Speed of light in vacuum | ||
Boltzmann constant |
Note that the input is in meters and that the output is a spectral irradiance in . Omitting the term from the numerator gives the blackbody emission in terms of radiance, with units where "sr" is steradians.
Taking the first derivative leads to the wavelength with maximum exitance. This is known as the Wien Displacement Law.
A closed form solution exists for the integral of the Planck blackbody equation over the entire spectrum. This is the Stefan-Boltzmann equation. In general, there is no known closed-form solution for the definite integral of the Planck blackbody equation; numerical integration techniques must be used.
The relationship between the ideal blackbody exitance and the actual exitance of a surface is given by emissivity.
An object at 300K (~30 Celsius) has a peak emission 9.66 microns. It has virtually no self-emission before 2.50 microns, hence self-emission is typically associated with the "thermal" regions of the EM spectrum. However, the Sun has a peak emission around 0.49 microns which is in the visible region of spectrum.