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The double-heatpipe black body: a high-accuracy standard source of spectral irradiance for measurements of<i>T</i> <i>T</i><sub>90</sub>
17
Citations
12
References
1995
Year
EngineeringThermal SensingHigh-accuracy Standard SourceBlack BodySpectral IrradianceThermal RadiationRadiative TransferCalibrationLarge-area Black BodyInfrared OpticThermophysicsThermodynamicsInstrumentationPhotometryDouble-heatpipe Black BodyPhysicsRadiative AbsorptionRadiation MeasurementRadiation TransportCold ChemistryThermal PhysicsRadiometryNuclear AstrophysicsThermographyNatural SciencesSpectroscopyTemperature MeasurementThermal SensorThermal EngineeringEmissivity
The Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) has developed a large-area black body (LABB) for accurate realization of the spectral irradiance in the red and near-infrared spectral range. Its temperature is measured by standard Pt-resistance thermometers according to the International Temperature Scale of 1990 (ITS-90). The black body consists of two concentric sodium heatpipes, the inner one with temperature stability of ±2 mK forming the radiating cavity. The relative uncertainty of the spectral irradiance of the LABB in the red spectral range is 6 × 10-4 at the freezing point of silver, the largest contribution resulting from the thermodynamic uncertainty of the temperature scale. This allows the ITS-90 to be checked by a comparison of the LABB with a cryogenic radiometer using calibrated filter radiometers as transfer standards. The thermodynamic temperatures obtained in the range 660 °C to 962 °C agree with T90 within the combined 1σ uncertainties.
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