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Physics · 2.3.3 Thermal radiation · Paper 6 practical

Thermal Radiation. Radiate it.

Investigate how surface colour and texture affect the emission, absorption and reflection of infrared radiation. Dull black surfaces are the best emitters and absorbers; shiny silver surfaces absorb least and so reflect the most.

0625 Topic 2.3.3 — Radiation Leslie cube · emission · absorption · reflection
Setup — pick emission or absorption mode, then run the experiment.

Variables

90
10

Live readouts

Surface
dull black
Emissivity (relative)
1.00
Detector reading
0.0
Time
0 s
Dull black surfaces emit and absorb infrared best; shiny silver reflects it and is the poorest.

Trial data — compare surfaces

Run each surface and record the detector reading to compare.
📋 Method (Cambridge ATP procedure)

Emission (Leslie cube):

  1. Fill a Leslie cube (four different faces: dull black, dull white, shiny black, shiny silver) with boiling water.
  2. Place an infrared detector (thermopile) a fixed distance from one face.
  3. Record the detector reading; repeat for each face at the same distance and temperature.

Absorption: shine a radiant heater equidistant between a dull black and a shiny silver plate, each with a thermometer or wax-held coin on the back; the black plate warms faster.

Reflection: aim the heater at a surface tilted at an angle and place the detector along the reflected ray. The shiny silver surface reflects most of the infrared (a strong reading); the dull black surface absorbs it instead, so almost nothing reflects. For an opaque surface, reflectivity = 1 − absorptivity, and absorptivity = emissivity (Kirchhoff's law) — so a good absorber is a poor reflector.

Result: dull black is the best emitter and absorber but the worst reflector; shiny silver is the worst emitter/absorber but the best reflector. This is why vacuum flasks and survival blankets are silvered.

⚠ Sources of error & precautions
  • Same distance for every face/plate — radiation intensity falls with distance.
  • Same temperature of the cube/source throughout (top up with hot water).
  • Same detector orientation — face it squarely at the surface.
  • Background radiation — shield the detector from other hot objects and direct sunlight.
  • Surface area the same for each face.
🎯 Syllabus reference (0625)
  • 2.3.3 Radiation — recall that thermal radiation is infrared and requires no medium; describe how surface colour and texture affect emission and absorption; describe experiments to distinguish good and bad emitters/absorbers; relate to applications (e.g. shiny kettles, black solar panels).

Ask the lab assistant