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14 avril 2010

The Definition of Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet (UV) light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than x-rays, in the range 10 nm to 400 nm, and energies from 3 eV to 124 eV.  It has Advertising Promotional Items ,Advertising Promotional Products ,Bettoni Pens ,Branded Promotional Items ,Business Promotional Item ,Cheap Promotional Pens ,Cheap Promotional Products,Company Promotional Items ,Corporate Promotional Items ,Corporate Promotional Product ,Corporate Promotional Products ,Custom Imprinted Promotional Products ,Custom Printed Promotional Products ,Custom Promotional Gifts ,Customized Promotional Items ,Customized Promotional Products ,Discount Promotional Items ,Discount Promotional Products ,Imprinted Memo Pads ,Imprinted Notepad ,Imprinted Promotional Items ,Logo Promotional Products ,Marketing Promotional Items ,Personalized Promotional Items ,Personalized Promotional Products ,Printed Promotional Items ,Printed Promotional Products ,Promotional Bic Pens ,Promotional Business Gifts,Promotional Business Items. It is so named because the spectrum consists of electromagnetic waves with frequencies higher than those that humans identify as the color violet.
UV light is found in beer filling machine sunlight and is emitted by electric arcs and specialized lights such as black lights. As an ionizing radiation it can cause chemical reactions, and causes many substances to glow or fluoresce. Most people are aware of the effects of UV through the painful condition of sunburn, but the UV spectrum has many other effects, both beneficial and damaging, on human health.
Discovery
The discovery of UV radiation was intimately associated with the china market research observation that silver salts darken when exposed to sunlight. In 1801 the German physicist Johann Wilhelm Ritter made the china market entry hallmark observation that invisible rays just beyond the violet end of the visible spectrum were especially effective at darkening silver chloride-soaked paper. He called them “de-oxidizing rays” to emphasize their chemical reactivity and to distinguish them from “heat rays” at the other end of the visible spectrum. The simpler term “chemical rays” was adopted shortly thereafter, and it remained popular throughout the 19th century. The terms chemical and heat rays were eventually dropped in favor of ultraviolet and infrared radiation, respectively.[1]
The discovery of the ultraviolet radiation below 200 nm, named vacuum nail products ultraviolet because it is strongly absorbed by air, was made in 1893 by the German physicist Victor Schumann.[2]
Origin of the term
The name means “beyond violet” (from Latin ultra, “beyond”), violet being the color of the shortest wavelengths of visible light. UV light has a shorter wavelength than that of violet light.
Sources of UV
Natural sources of UV
The sun emits ultraviolet radiation in the UVA, UVB, and UVC bands. The Earth’s ozone layer blocks 98.7% of this UV radiation from penetrating through the atmosphere. 98.7% of the ultraviolet radiation that reaches the Earth’s surface is UVA. (Some of the UVB and UVC radiation is responsible for the generation of the ozone layer.)
Ordinary glass is partially transparent to UVA but is opaque to shorter wavelengths while Silica or quartz glass, depending on quality, can be transparent even to vacuum UV wavelengths. Ordinary window glass passes about 90% of the light above 350 nm, but blocks over 90% of the light below 300 nm.[4][5][6]
The onset of vacuum UV, 200 nm, is defined by the fact that ordinary air is opaque at shorter wavelengths. This opacity is due to the strong absorption of light of these wavelengths by oxygen in the air. Pure nitrogen (less than about 10 ppm oxygen) is transparent to wavelengths in the range of about 150–200 nm. This has wide practical significance now that semiconductor manufacturing processes are using wavelengths shorter than 200 nm. By working in oxygen-free gas, the equipment does not have to be built to withstand the pressure differences required to work in a vacuum. Some other scientific instruments, such as circular dichroism spectrometers, are also commonly nitrogen purged and operate in this spectral region.
Extreme UV is characterized by a transition in the physics of interaction with matter: wavelengths longer than about 30 nm interact mainly with the chemical valence electrons of matter, while wavelengths shorter than that interact mainly with inner shell electrons and nuclei. The long end of the EUV/XUV spectrum is set by a prominent He+ spectral line at 30.4 nm. XUV is strongly absorbed by most known materials, but it is possible to synthesize multilayer optics that reflect up to about 50% of XUV radiation at normal incidence. This technology has been used to make telescopes for solar imaging; it was pioneered by the NIXT and MSSTA sounding rockets in the 1990s; (current examples are SOHO/EIT and TRACE) and for nanolithography (printing of traces and devices on microchips).
”Black light”
Main article: Black light
A black light, or investment china Wood’s light, is a lamp that emits long wave UV radiation and very little visible light. Commonly these are referred to as simply a “nail uv lamp light”. Fluorescent black lights are typically made in the same fashion as normal fluorescent lights except that only one phosphor is used and the normally clear glass envelope of the bulb may be replaced by a deep-bluish-purple glass called Wood’s glass, a nickel-oxide–doped glass, which blocks almost all visible light above 400 nanometres. The color of such lamps is often referred to in the trade as “blacklight blue” or “BLB.” This is to distinguish these lamps from “bug zapper” blacklight (“BL”) lamps that don’t have the blue Wood’s glass. The phosphor typically used for a near 368 to 371 nanometre emission peak is either europium-doped strontium fluoroborate (SrB4O7F:Eu2+) or europium-doped strontium borate (SrB4O7:Eu2+) while the phosphor used to produce a peak around 350 to 353 nanometres is lead-doped barium silicate (BaSi2O5:Pb+). “Blacklight Blue” lamps peak at 365 nm.
While “black lights” do produce light in the UV range, their spectrum is confined to the longwave UVA region. Unlike UVB and UVC, which are responsible for the direct DNA damage that leads to skin cancer, black light is limited to lower energy, longer waves and does not cause sunburn. However, UVA is capable of causing damage to collagen fibers and destroying vitamin A in skin.
A black light may also be formed by simply using Wood’s glass instead of clear glass as the envelope for a common incandescent bulb. This was the method used to create the very first black light sources. Though it remains a cheaper alternative to the fluorescent method, it is exceptionally inefficient at producing UV light (less than 0.1% of the input power) owing to the black body nature of the incandescent light source. Incandescent UV bulbs, due to their inefficiency, may also become dangerously hot during use. More rarely still, high power (hundreds of watts) mercury vapor black lights can be found which use a UV emitting phosphor and an envelope of Wood’s glass. These lamps are used mainly for theatrical and concert displays and also become very hot during normal use.
Some UV fluorescent bulbs specifically designed to attract insects use the same near-UV emitting phosphor as normal blacklights, but use plain glass instead of the more expensive Wood’s glass. Plain glass blocks less of the visible mercury emission spectrum, making them appear light blue to the naked eye. These lamps are referred to as “blacklight” or “BL” in most lighting catalogs.
Ultraviolet light can also be generated by some light-emitting diodes.
Ultraviolet fluorescent lamps
Fluorescent lamps without a phosphorescent coating to convert UV to visible light, emit ultraviolet light peaking at 254 nm due to the peak emission of the mercury within the bulb. With the addition of a suitable phosphorescent coating, they can be modified to produce a UVA, UVB, or visible light spectrum (all fluorescent tubes used for domestic and commercial lighting are mercury (Hg) UV emission bulbs at heart).
Such low pressure mercury lamps are used extensively for disinfection, and in standard form have an optimum operating temperature of approx 30 degrees Celsius. Use of a mercury amalgam allows operating temperature to rise to 100 degrees Celsius, and UVC emission to approx double or triple.

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