Infrared
imaging technology and biological applications.
Source
Institute of Zoology, University of Graz, Graz,
Austria. gerald.kastberger@uni-graz.at
Abstract
Temperature is the most
frequently measured physical quantity, second only to time. Infrared (IR)
technology has been utilized successfully in astronomy (for a summary,see
Hermans-Killam, 2002b) and in industrial and research settings (Gruner, 2002;
Madding, 1982, 1989; Wolfe & Zissis, 1993) for decades. However, fairly
recent innovations have reduced costs, increased reliability, and resulted in
noncontact IR sensors offering mobile, smaller units of measurement (EOI, 2002;
Flir, 2000, 2001,2002). The advantages of using IR imaging are (1) rapidity in
the millisecond range, facilitating measurement of moving targets, (2)
noncontact procedures, allowing measurements of hazardous or physically
inaccessible objects, (3) no interference and no energy lost from the target,
(4) no risk of contamination, and (5) no mechanical effect on the surface of
the object. All these factors have led to IR technology's becoming an area of
interest for new kinds of applications and users. In both manufacturing and
quality control, temperature plays an important role as an indicator of the
condition of a product or a piece of machinery (EOI, 2002; Flir, 2000, 2001,
2002; Raytek, 2002). In medical and
veterinary applications, IR thermometry is increasingly used in organ
diagnostics, in the evaluation of sports injuries and the progression of
therapy, in disease evaluation (e.g, breast cancer, arthritis, and SARS; Flir,
2003), and in injury and inflammation examinations in horses, livestock (Tivey
& Banhazi, 2002), and zoo animals (Hermans-Killam, 2002a; Thiesbrummel,
2002). Lastly, physiological expressions of life processes in animals
(Kastberger, Winder, & Steindl, 2001; Stabentheiner, Kovac, &
Hagmüller, 1995; Stabentheiner, Kovac, & Schmaranzer, 2002; Stabentheiner
& Schmarnzer, 1987) and plants (Bermadinger-Stabentheiner &
Stabentheiner, 1995) can be monitored. The most recent field in which IR
technology has been applied is animal behavior. This article focuses on the
practical options for noncontact IR thermometry--in particular, in biological
applications.
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