Black Body Radiation
Black Body Radiation *
A black body is one that absorbs all the EM radiation (light...) that strikes it. To stay in thermal equilibrium, it must emit radiation at the same rate as it absorbs it so a black body also radiates well. (Stoves are black.)Radiation from a hot object is familiar to us. Objects around room temperature radiate mainly in the infrared as seen the the graph below.

By considering plates in thermal equilibrium it can be shown that the emissive power over the absorption coefficient must be the same as a function of wavelength, even for plates of different materials.

It there were differences, there could be a net energy flow from one plate to the other, violating the equilibrium condition.


Thus, the black body Emissive power,

A good example of a black body is a cavity with a small hole in it. Any light incident upon the hole goes into the cavity and is essentially never reflected out since it would have to undergo a very large number of reflections off walls of the cavity. If we make the walls absorptive (perhaps by painting them black), the cavity makes a perfect black body.



The only part that takes a little thinking is the 4 in the equation above.
Rayleigh and Jeans calculated t he energy density (in EM waves) inside a cavity and hence the emission spectrum of a black body. Their calculation was based on simple EM theory and equipartition. It not only did not agree with data; it said that all energy would be instantly radiated away in high frequency EM radiation. This was called the ultraviolet catastrophe.



His formula fit the data so well that he tried to find a way to derive it. In a few months he was able to do this, by postulating that energy was emitted in quanta with







We can integrate this over frequency to get the total power radiated per unit area.

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