fivemack: (bok)
Tom Womack ([personal profile] fivemack) wrote2013-10-13 08:36 pm

Foolish purchases of the age

A little while ago, I bought a thermal-infra-red camera. It was quite expensive, and I was not entirely sure what to do with it.

I was able to take surprisingly unflattering pictures of my friends, some of whom had cold fingers, were handling oddly-shaped insulating objects, or were drinking cold cider:


IR_0002

IR_0003

IR_0012

IR_0013

IR_0015


Normal spectacle lenses are good mirrors for thermal-IR, so everyone appears to be wearing Latin-American-dictator sunglasses indoors.

I could determine the existence of the moon, that my bicycle had not been stolen, and that the houses opposite had had their roofs insulated:

IR_0029

IR_0045

IR_0030


I could observe that black clothes left to dry in an unventilated conservatory in midsummer get really quite hot, that the hot-water pump in my airing-cupboard was connected to a well-insulated tank by poorly-insulated piping, that the microwave melted chocolate very irregularly, and that the USB-to-ethernet chip on my ODROID-X devboard was getting rather hot (see the PCB shot in visible light)


IR_0052

IR_0043

IR_0020

IR_0053




In addition, I could determine where on the rug I had been standing, deduce that at some point in the night my garden contained at least one cat, and conclude that the ventilator in the corner of my living room was letting cold air in.


IR_0032

IR_0055

IR_0059


You can also deduce by looking at the video feed from the camera that glass windows and shiny metal objects are reflective in the infra-red, but it's a bit hard to take a photo to show that.

I would really appreciate interesting ideas of other things to photograph in the ten-micron band; my house doesn't seem to have any particularly exciting opportunities for insulation, but if anyone has a dwelling with inexplicable cold spots or a machine with inexplicable hot spots, I can at least document them in exchange for a small amount of polite conversation. I'm wondering whether there is interest to be had in the depths of the Fens on a cold November night, but would rather not do that alone.

I am not entirely sure how happy this device is to be taken across international borders - it's the 9Hz version, so was exportable from the US to the EU and is happy within the EU, but I suspect taking it to India or China would attract quite the wrong kind of attention from customs.

[identity profile] twoeleven.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 08:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Can the camera see steam rising from a hot drink? Or convective currents in a typical thin-walled plastic bottle with an ice cube floating at the top of warm water?

[identity profile] history-monk.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 09:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Open up a computer, and take time-lapse pictures of it warming up from cold?

Ditto of a bowl of fruit and ice-cream melting?

Compare heat signatures of an tungsten filament light bulb, a CFL and an LED?

[identity profile] lisajulie.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 09:30 pm (UTC)(link)
ping [livejournal.com profile] jonsinger?

[identity profile] arnhem.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Colleagues took photographs of computer keyboards after people had typed their password. This almost certainly works for cashpoints too ...
ext_63737: Posing at Zeusaphone concert, 2008 (That's It boater)

[identity profile] beamjockey.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
How about a portrait series of hot new SF authors?
ext_63737: Posing at Zeusaphone concert, 2008 (rockin' zeusaphone)

[identity profile] beamjockey.livejournal.com 2013-10-13 10:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Would be interesting to strap an ordinary camera to the device and play around with fusing visible and thermal IR data. Can't make them coaxial, but you might come close, or even devise a clever mount to swing each camera into the same POV in rapid succession.

[livejournal.com profile] history_monk suggests that time-lapse might be interesting. A candle? A campfire?

Night wildlife photography might be interesting. Find where flocks of geese sleep?
seawasp: (Poisonous&Venomous)

[personal profile] seawasp 2013-10-14 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
Note that not only is this something my company does for money, it's something I have a patent in.

There are multiple uses for IR imagery, as well as fused IR-VIS imagery. One that we sell commercially is something to detect functional or failed brakes on commercial vehicles or trains.

Electrical fault detection is a common use, as is one you've already determined (home energy efficiency auditing, looking for leaks/failures of insulation in various areas.

Security imagery is a very common use, since IR isn't affected by day or night cycles.

Seeing through fog, smoke, etc., is what the military commonly uses it for.

[identity profile] peristaltor.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 03:48 am (UTC)(link)
If you've the right friends, I've seen fun movies taken with those cameras involving showers. So fun, in fact, I thought of buying one myself. . . .

[identity profile] angoel.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 05:50 am (UTC)(link)
Lend it to people who want to check how well the thermal insulation on their house works.

[identity profile] bugshaw.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 06:41 am (UTC)(link)
Bad stop-motion animation where all you can see is which part of the model was recently handled into position?

More interesting stop-motion animation showing the passage of touch of invisible hands or feet?

Find the escaped hamster under the furniture!

[identity profile] crazyscot.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 07:34 am (UTC)(link)
You could set yourself up as some kind of insulation / home energy consultant?

[identity profile] jojomojo.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 08:15 am (UTC)(link)
My entire house is a cold spot, I suspect explicable, however, by being a Grade 2 listed 18th century end terrace. :)
simont: A picture of me in 2016 (Default)

[personal profile] simont 2013-10-14 08:21 am (UTC)(link)
Do you happen to have versions of those photos without the assorted overlays of temperature, crosshair and trademark?

[identity profile] pavanne.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 11:20 am (UTC)(link)
I think that's very cool.

I'd use it to photograph bird eggs during incubation, to see if there are temperature differences detectable as the embryo develops. It's notoriously difficult to figure out what's going on in an eggshell once the embryo occupies too much of the shell to shine a strong light through the egg. At a minimum, I assume this device could tell if the egg was hotter than the incubator (=alive) or at ambient temperature (=explosion risk).
emperor: (Phoenix)

[personal profile] emperor 2013-10-14 02:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd be interested to see which (if any) bits of our house are particularly leaky...

[identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 06:35 pm (UTC)(link)
That is a very cool toy indeed, though I do see the issue of finding interesting targets for it.

You might try landscapes with a variety of foliage in direct sunlight, going for varying infrared reflectivity rather than for heat emissions (that's the classic target for far-infrared art photography). (Firefox spill-chucker doesn't known "reflectivity".)

Industrial plants from the air, but that's a lot of trouble mostly (maybe there's an overlook somewhere that has interesting plant below?).

[identity profile] mobbsy.livejournal.com 2013-10-14 08:51 pm (UTC)(link)
If only there was some convenient place in the middle of the Fens...

(Pick a clear night and we can combine it with star gazing)

[identity profile] vicarage.livejournal.com 2013-10-15 06:09 am (UTC)(link)
Under the bonnet of a car

Filling a bath timelapse

Compost heaps, manure heaps

Horses after a run

Chocolate teapot timelapse, to continue the pseudo research paper tradition.