| Let me try again. Assistant Professor of Physics here (not a grad student). Yes, reflectance of room temperature aluminum at those wavelengths is pretty good (not true for all metals BTW). Yes, this usually makes it hard to distinguish thermal radiation and reflected radiation with metals. What are you trying to say though? That whatever comes off from a metal must always be a reflection coming from somewhere else? > Thus, their own Planck spectrum is (approximately) scaled down by their emissivity, and consequently the radiation in the measured MIR band is mostly what is reflected, which tends to come from the room-temperature environment. I don't know what you mean by "Planck spectrum is (approximately) scaled down" (as "Planck spectrum" only refers to thermal radiation and is generated in a separate process from reflected photons [one is governed by the conduction band whereas the other is governed by everything up to Fermi level] and you can't hope to suppress thermal radiation by simply shining random environmental light on a metal --there is no such thing as "scaling down" of thermal radiation unless you engineer such property), but there is just no way that 10 micron photons at that intensity could be coming from a room-temperature environment. So your blanket statements about metals aside, the hot area in that picture is due to a very specific signal which can't be due to something that's reflected from the environment. No significant fraction of those 10 micron photons coming off from that localized the area around the CPU could have originated from the environment --assuming that those pictures aren't taken in a hot oven and someone focused the thermal radiation on to the heatsink to get that amount of intensity. And as I mentioned, that's pretty trivial to test. If those 10 micron photons were coming from the environment as you or the parent comment suggest, the thermal camera would report ~60C even when you look at Pi 4 when it is cooled (again, this is something can use as "dark frame" and subtract off from all readings if you're trying to be more accurate). This is clearly not the case, though, as you can see in the video on the blog post. |
kees99 and klickverbot are saying it's unlikely the CPU is actually 23°C, especially given the author's statement the CPU was around 60°C, and that it's well known taking thermal camera images of things with different emissivities will produce inaccurate results.
kees99 is also saying, given that the thermal image doesn't accurately measure the temperature of the CPU, the article's statement that the metal casing helps isn't really warranted.