Novus Light Home
In research and development applications, infrared cameras are used for capturing and recording thermal distribution and variations in real time

FLIR Systems has published a comparison of the benefits of using a thermal imaging camera versus an Infrared thermometer for non-contact measurement of temperature across a range of industrial and scientific R&D applications.

Infrared (IR) thermometers are reliable and very useful for single-spot temperature readings, but, for scanning large areas or systems,FLIR's comparison notes that it is easy to miss critical components that may be near failure and need repair or replacement. On the other hand, a thermal imaging camera can scan entire systems, components, or panels in one go - without missing any overheating hazards, no matter how small. With an image resolution equivalent to using hundreds of thousands of IR thermometers at the same time – thermal imaging cameras help you find thermal problems faster, easier and with extremely high accuracy.

In research and development applications, infrared cameras are used for capturing and recording thermal distribution and variations in real time.  This allows engineers and researchers to see and accurately measure heat patterns, dissipation, leakage, and other temperature factors in equipment, products and processes.

These cameras can distinguish temperature changes as subtle as 0.02C.  They feature state-of-the-art detector technology and advanced algorithms for precise, high performance measurements from 180C to 3000C.

Labels: temperature,thermal imaging,camera,vision,optics,measurement,photonics

Back Back to News

Illuminating Products

Light Beams (Most Read)

Copyright © 2026 Novus Media Today Group, LLC. All rights reserved. Website design and build by MM Design.