Paper
15 October 2012 A history of slide rules for blackbody radiation computations
R. Barry Johnson, Sean M. Stewart
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
During the Second World War the importance of utilizing detection devices capable of operating in the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum was firmly established. Up until that time, laboriously constructed tables for blackbody radiation needed to be used in calculations involving the amount of radiation radiated within a given spectral region or for other related radiometric quantities. To rapidly achieve reasonably accurate calculations of such radiometric quantities, a blackbody radiation calculator was devised in slide rule form first in Germany in 1944 and soon after in England and the United States. In the immediate decades after its introduction, the radiation slide rule was widely adopted and recognized as a useful and important tool for engineers and scientists working in the infrared field. It reached its pinnacle in the United States in 1970 in a rule introduced by Electro Optical Industries, Inc. With the onset in the latter half of the 1970s of affordable, hand-held electronic calculators, the impending demise of the radiation slide rule was evident. No longer the calculational device of choice, the radiation slide rule all but disappeared within a few short years. Although today blackbody radiation calculations can be readily accomplished using anything from a programmable pocket calculator upwards, with each device making use of a wide variety of numerical approximations to the integral of Planck’s function, radiation slide rules were in the early decades of infrared technology the definitive “workhorse” for those involved in infrared systems design and engineering. This paper presents a historical development of radiation slide rules with many versions being discussed.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
R. Barry Johnson and Sean M. Stewart "A history of slide rules for blackbody radiation computations", Proc. SPIE 8483, Tribute to William Wolfe, 848302 (15 October 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.932274
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Infrared radiation

Black bodies

IRIS Consortium

Sensors

Computing systems

Manufacturing

Photography

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