Newton divided the spectrum
into seven named colors: red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, indigo, and violet, or ROY G. BIV. Originally
only five primary colors were named: red, yellow,
green, blue and violet, but later he added indigo
and orange to have seven colors. The need for the
number seven was derived from the belief that it
should match the number of known planets, number
of days in a week and the number of notes on a major
scale. This theory was derived from ancient Greek
Sophist philosophy.
The word Spectrum is Latin for
apparition, and was coined by Newton during his
experiments with light. He observed that sunlight
passing though a prism produced the apparition or
spectrum or, in other words, a band of colors.
Sir Isaac Newton wrote Optick's
released in 1704, hailed as one of the earliest
explanations of the Spectrum.
The field of optics usually
describes the behavior of visible, infrared, and
ultraviolet light; however because light is an electromagnetic
wave, analogous phenomena occur in X-rays, microwaves,
radio waves, and other forms of electromagnetic
radiation. Optics can thus be regarded as a sub-field
of electromagnetism.
In vision applications that
use camera technology the optical fields of visible,
infrared and ultraviolet are the most widely used,
and with the implementation of specialized optics,
filters, and lighting many solutions to imaging
issues can be found. Infrared Radiation (IR) is
a wavelength longer than visible light but shorter
than radio waves (750nm to 1nm). Ultraviolet (UV)
is shorter than visible light but longer than X-Ray
(400nm to 200nm Near UV, NUV). Most cameras will
fall in the near IR or near UV range and with the
use of specialized lighting (LED’s), enhancement
of the wavelengths is possible.
Infrared (IR) camera technology
is very common in military applications and Ultraviolet
(UV) solutions are used in various machine vision,
and industrial imaging applications. There are also
digital cameras, such as Firewire? 1394 which exploit
the use of Ultraviolet (UV). Sony Electronics, Inc.
offers the XCDSX910UV camera featuring Firewire?
1394, digital camera technology. This camera is
ideal for use in demanding markets such as semiconductor
inspection, ultraviolet microscopy, FA precision
inspection and surface inspection applications.
Hitachi Kokusai Electric Inc.
offers the KP-F120, a Near IR (NIR), high resolution,
progressive scan camera with Camera Link, USB2.0,
Firewire 1394 or LVDS digital camera interfaces.
The spectral response extends beyond 1000 nm. This
camera is appropriate for a wide range of applications
including machine vision, agricultural inspection,
medical diagnostics and research, and microscopy.
There are many cameras that
fall into the near Infared (IR) and near Ultraviolet
(UV) ranges. They are used in a variety of applications
and provide many solutions from military to medical.