What is the Specific Heat of an Ideal Blackbody?

In summary, the conversation discussed the concept of a blackbody and its steady-state temperature, as well as the specific heat of different materials. The participants also explored the factors that affect the equilibrium temperature of objects, such as reflectivity and emissivity in different spectral ranges. It was concluded that an object with high emissivity in the far infrared (FIR) will reach a lower steady-state temperature due to its ability to lose heat more quickly. This is because at steady state, the rate of heat loss must equal the rate of heat gain, and an object with high emissivity will lose heat faster.
  • #1
fog37
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Hello,

I was thinking about how a blackbody (and any other type of body) eventually reaches a steady-state, constant and finite temperature once the absorbed energy is equal to the emitted energy. The specific heat of a substance indicates the temperature change causes by the absorption/emission of a certain amount of energy.

That said, what would the specific heat of an ideal blackbody be?

Thanks!
 
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  • #2
Can be anything ! Depends on the material.
 
  • #3
I see. Thanks.

I just see how certain materials, like a black painted object and a white painted object, reach their steady state temperatures, when left in sunlight, at different times. I think the black painted object reaches a higher steady state temperature faster and sooner than the white painted object (whose steady-state temperature is also lower). I thought that that speed would be somehow related to some specific heat property of the objects...
 
  • #4
Blackbody has a specific meaning in physics (see below). It sounds like you are asking about objects painted black; not a blackbody.

Such an object will reach an equilibrium temperature, depending on its size, shape, material, orientation toward the sun, and what it is in contact with. Materials with higher specific heat change temperature more slowly, but many factors are involved.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_body said:
An approximate realization of a black surface is a hole in the wall of a large enclosure. Any light entering the hole is reflected within the internal surface of the body indefinitely or absorbed within the body and is unlikely to re-emerge, making the hole a nearly perfect absorber. The radiation confined in such an enclosure may or may not be in thermal equilibrium, depending upon the nature of the walls and the other contents of the enclosure.[3][4]

Real materials emit energy at a fraction—called the emissivity—of black-body energy levels. By definition, a black body in thermal equilibrium has an emissivity of ε = 1.0. A source with lower emissivity independent of frequency often is referred to as a gray body.[5][6] Construction of black bodies with emissivity as close to one as possible remains a topic of current interest.[7]
 
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  • #5
Search "thermal diffusivity" and Biot number.
 
  • #6
fog37 said:
I thought that that speed would be somehow related to some specific heat property of the objects...
It is, but that isn't what you asked. You asked to equate specific heat and radiation (emissivity) when as you correctly note here, they are two separate variables in this problem.
 
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  • #7
Thanks.

Well, materials having constant emissivity, absorptivity and reflectivity across the entire spectrum don't exist. All real objects are selective radiators/absorbers.

I am trying to figure out how to determine which, between two real objects, will remain cooler under sunlight. I think it will first depend on the reflectivity of each object over the incident solar spectrum (300nm-2500nm). The object will the highest reflectivity in this spectral range will absorb very little solar radiation. But that is not enough.

We need to consider the emissivity of each object in the far infrared (FIR) and the object with the largest emissivity in the FIR will be cooler and have a lower steady-state temperature.

So, the coolest object would have a high reflectivity in the VIS and a high emissivity in the FIR. An object with a a high VIS reflectivity and low FIR emissivity will potentially get very hot. I am still not sure why a high emissivity in the FIR would lead to a lower final steady-state temperature than an object with low emissivity. Emissivity correlates on how much energy per unit time and unit area the object emits. I guess an object with high emissivity will reach steady-state sooner and at a lower temperature...
 
  • #8
fog37 said:
I am still not sure why a high emissivity in the FIR would lead to a lower final steady-state temperature than an object with low emissivity
The radiation an object emits will ideally be a black body spectrum. The peak of that spectrum will depend on temperature and, for an object sitting out in the sun, the resulting temperature will give a peak in the FIR. If such an object has a high emissitivity in the FIR, it will radiate more strongly than an object with a low emissivity. It will lose heat faster. If it loses heat faster than it gains heat, its temperature will fall.

All other things being equal, that means that an object with a high emissivity will equilibriate at a lower temperature where the rate of heat loss is reduced to become the same as the rate of heat gain.
 
  • #9
jbriggs444 said:
The radiation an object emits will ideally be a black body spectrum. The peak of that spectrum will depend on temperature and, for an object sitting out in the sun, the resulting temperature will give a peak in the FIR. If such an object has a high emissitivity in the FIR, it will radiate more strongly than an object with a low emissivity. It will lose heat faster. If it loses heat faster than it gains heat, its temperature will fall.

All other things being equal, that means that an object with a high emissivity will equilibriate at a lower temperature where the rate of heat loss is reduced to become the same as the rate of heat gain.

Thank you jbriggs444.

I am think you about your statement "All other things being equal, that means that an object with a high emissivity will equilibriate at a lower temperature where the rate of heat loss is reduced to become the same as the rate of heat gain."

So, the object gets progressively hotter as time goes by and eventually reaches a steady-state temperature. But your point is that if the emissivity is high that stable temperature will be lower. could you add another clarification about this point? I know that at steady state, energy in = energy out but I cannot articulate well why that condition would be reached at a lower temperature if the emissivity is high.

So, while high emissivity implies high absorptivity in the same spectral region (the FIR in the case), the high absorptivity in the FIR does not imply the object will become hot since the solar spectrum does not have FIR radiation. What matters is the absorptivity in the spectral region of the incident solar spectrum.

For an object to be cool in the sun, high reflectivity in the VIS and high emissivity in the FIR would be the requirements. Other combinations (low reflectivity in the VIS and high emissivity in the FIR, etc.) would not be as good at keeping the object cool.

Thanks!
 
  • #10
fog37 said:
So, the object gets progressively hotter as time goes by and eventually reaches a steady-state temperature. But your point is that if the emissivity is high that stable temperature will be lower. could you add another clarification about this point? I know that at steady state, energy in = energy out but I cannot articulate well why that condition would be reached at a lower temperature if the emissivity is high.
In general, an object will warm up until it emits at the same rate that it absorbs. The hotter it gets, the more it emits until eventually an equilibrium is reached.

If the object already emits enough at a low temperature to match what it absorbs then it will never get to a higher temperature.

Or, looking at it the opposite way, if an object with a high emissivity is at a high temperature, it will be emitting too much. It will cool down toward a lower temperature equilibrium condition.
 
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  • #11
Thank you! That was a great explanation.

So, for comparison purposes, I would argue that an ideal blackbody, which has maximum emissivity of 1 at all wavelengths and max absorptivity of 1 at all wavelengths, absorbs maximally and emits maximally and would become hotter than a body which is a selective radiator/absorber and has low absorptivity in the VIS and emissivity 1 in the FIR. The selective radiator would be much cooler than the ideal blackbody.

A metal object, which has high reflectivity (and low absorptivity) in the VIS but low emissivity in the FIR, would get much hotter than an ideal blackbody.

A black painted object: black paint has high absorptivity in the VIS and high emissivity in the FIR and white paint has low absorptivity in the VIS and high emissivity in the FIR. Hence a white painted object will be cooler than a black painted object. What about a metal object compared to a black painted object? Which one should get hotter? I think the metal one would get hotter
 
  • #12
This seems like an old blog
but I would propose that in equilibrium all bodies (black or gray) in a constant radiation flux would reach the same temperature
The black ones heat and cool at the highest possible rate, and the gray ones heat and cool at a lower rate, but the emissivity is on both sides of the heating and cooling equation so it cancels out. Temperature is only defendant on the radiation flux.
 

What is the specific heat of a blackbody?

The specific heat of a blackbody is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of the blackbody by one degree Celsius.

What factors affect the specific heat of a blackbody?

The specific heat of a blackbody is affected by its material composition, temperature, and pressure.

How is the specific heat of a blackbody measured?

The specific heat of a blackbody can be measured experimentally by applying a known amount of heat energy to the blackbody and measuring the resulting temperature change.

Why is the specific heat of a blackbody important?

The specific heat of a blackbody is important in understanding the transfer of heat energy and predicting the behavior of blackbodies under different conditions.

How does the specific heat of a blackbody relate to its emissivity?

The specific heat of a blackbody is directly related to its emissivity. A higher emissivity results in a higher specific heat, as more heat energy is required to raise the temperature of the blackbody due to its increased ability to radiate heat energy.

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