HOW TO FIND THE TEMPERATURE VALUE IN THE THERMAL CAMERA IMAGE?

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Özgür Uzunkaya
Özgür Uzunkaya le 21 Mai 2022
I AM TRYING TO WRITE A SOFTWARE THAT DETECTS THE TEMPERATURE VALUES IN THE IMAGE IN DEGREES WHEN A COMPUTER MOUSE LOOKS OVER THE THERMAL CAMERA IMAGE. HOW CAN I WRITE THIS?
  4 commentaires
Özgür Uzunkaya
Özgür Uzunkaya le 21 Mai 2022
This is my project. I have to write before I buy. Can you help me?
dpb
dpb le 21 Mai 2022
Nope, not really, never used one other than with a vendor-supplied toolset, and that was only a one-time exercise at a power plant monitoring/finding hotspots on the boiler.
Bth, here's bound to be documentation for whatever product you're using -- I don't know if there's an industry standard that's followed or not.
Research is part of a project scope, not passing off the work to somebody else...

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Réponses (2)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 22 Mai 2022

Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 22 Mai 2022
See attached demo. Adapt as needed to your image.
  5 commentaires
Özgür Uzunkaya
Özgür Uzunkaya le 29 Mai 2022
I don't fully understand if the values ​​in this color bar are in degrees Celsius, is it 50 degrees Celsius red, 200 degrees Celsius dark blue?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 29 Mai 2022
Modifié(e) : Walter Roberson le 29 Mai 2022
No, that is an uncalibrated color bar showing the relationship between array values and colors. No temperature calibration is implied by that image.
We cannot conclude anything about temperature. By convention, lowest data values would normally be at the bottom of the color bar, but obviously not in this case. Is it possible that blue corresponds to hotter? It is not impossible.
If you look at the DIAS example that Image Analyst posted then it shows the same colors and blue at the bottom is associated with the lowest temperature, so the only calibrated example we have here would have blue be cooler and red be hotter. But if you remember physics, "red hot" is the coolest temperature that emits visible light, and the hottest that emits visible light is far blue. Hotter is bluer, ultraviolet is high energy in physics. So we cannot rule out blue being associated with hotter... but neither can we confirm it.

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