helicopter showing alleged drug traffickers being arrested by the
Colombian Navy of the
Space Shuttle Columbia, incidentally captured by FLIR camera aboard an
Apache helicopter during training at
Fort Hood, Texas
Infrared light falls into two basic ranges:
long-wave and
medium-wave. Long-wave infrared (LWIR) cameras, sometimes called "far-infrared", operate at 8 to 12 μm and can see heat sources, such as hot engine parts or human
body heat, several kilometers away. Longer-distance viewing is made more difficult with LWIR because the infrared light is
absorbed,
scattered, and
refracted by air and by water vapor. Some long-wave cameras require their detector to be
cryogenically cooled, typically for several minutes before use, although some moderately sensitive infrared cameras do not require this. Many thermal imagers, including some forward-looking infrared cameras (such as some LWIR
enhanced vision systems (EVS)) are also uncooled.
Medium-wave (MWIR) cameras operate in the 3–5 μm range. These can see almost as well, since those frequencies are less affected by water-vapor absorption, but generally require a more expensive
sensor array, along with cryogenic cooling. Many camera systems use
digital image processing to improve the image quality. Infrared imaging sensor arrays often have wildly inconsistent sensitivities from
pixel to pixel, due to limitations in the manufacturing process. To remedy this, the response of each pixel is measured at the factory, and a transform, most often linear, maps the measured input signal to an output level. Some companies offer advanced "fusion" technologies that blend a visible-spectrum image with an infrared-spectrum image to produce better results than a single-spectrum image alone. ==Properties==