WordNet
n. electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths longer than visible light but shorter than radio waves [syn: infrared, infrared light, infrared radiation]
Usage examples of "infrared emission".
The two gases together, it seemed to me, could pretty well absorb almost all the infrared emission, even if there was very little water vapor—.
The two gases together, it seemed to me, could pretty well absorb almost all the infrared emission, even if there was very little water vapor-something like two picket fences, the slats of one being fortuitously positioned to cover the gaps of the other.
To see a planet around another sun demanded that the Long Eye blot out the star's infrared emission, which was a million times brighter than the world being sought.
If you travel toward the observer at almost the speed of light, you will become enveloped in an eerie chromatic radiance: your usually invisible infrared emission will be shifted to the shorter visible wavelengths.
From the size of the infrared emission shell, the unseen sun ought to have been a red giant—.
The lighting tube's infrared emission is turned off, and the cloud condenses, just like on Earth.
In these parts, unless the crew is frozen to deat, there will be infrared emission--and also from that direction, out of the power plant, neutrinos above the background count.
Dividing the vast infrared emission by its component parts, he concluded he was looking at a minimum of forty thousand creatures.
We've proved the infrared emission, but infrared doesn't sear flesh.