Infrared Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Infrared stocks.

Infrared Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 20 HEI These 19 stocks are poised for tax reform turbocharge - Jefferies
Nov 20 BRKR Bruker jumps as CEO buys $5M company stock
Nov 20 BRKR Bruker Stock Explodes 10.5% After CEO's $5M Insider Bet
Nov 20 VSH Vishay Intertechnology 150 V MOSFET Increases Efficiency With the Industry’s Lowest RDS(ON) of 5.6 mΩ and RDS(ON)*Qg FOM of 336 mΩ*nC
Nov 20 HEI Is HEICO Corporation (HEI) Poised To Capitalize on the Steady Aging Of The Global Commercial Aerospace Fleet?
Nov 20 MOD Here is What to Know Beyond Why Modine Manufacturing Company (MOD) is a Trending Stock
Nov 20 MRCY Q3 Earnings Highs And Lows: General Dynamics (NYSE:GD) Vs The Rest Of The Defense Contractors Stocks
Nov 19 HEI A Look Into Heico Inc's Price Over Earnings
Nov 19 MOD Modine Manufacturing's AI Prospects Boosted By Expanded Capacity And Promising FY2027 Target
Nov 19 HEI Reasons to Add HEICO Stock to Your Portfolio Right Now
Nov 19 IRIX Iridex Comments on Changing Glaucoma Reimbursement Landscape
Nov 19 HEI Warren Buffett Just Bought 4 Stocks. Here's the Best of the Bunch.
Nov 19 HEI Warren Buffett Didn't Buy Many Stocks in Q3. Only the Smartest Investors Know This One.
Nov 18 HEI HEICO: High Flier, Flies Even Higher
Nov 18 HEI Dow Jones Leader Disney, Meta Stock Offer New Buy Points
Nov 18 HEI Will Heico (HEI) Beat Estimates Again in Its Next Earnings Report?
Nov 18 BRKR Bruker declares $0.05 dividend
Nov 18 BRKR Bruker Announces Quarterly Dividend
Nov 18 MRCY Spotting Winners: Axon (NASDAQ:AXON) And Aerospace and Defense Stocks In Q3
Nov 17 MRCY Trump's First 100 Days: Smart Money Is Watching These 3 Stocks
Infrared

Infrared (IR), sometimes called infrared light, is electromagnetic radiation (EMR) with wavelengths longer than those of visible light. It is therefore generally invisible to the human eye, although IR at wavelengths up to 1050 nanometers (nm)s from specially pulsed lasers can be seen by humans under certain conditions. IR wavelengths extend from the nominal red edge of the visible spectrum at 700 nanometers (frequency 430 THz), to 1 millimeter (300 GHz). Most of the thermal radiation emitted by objects near room temperature is infrared. As with all EMR, IR carries radiant energy and behaves both like a wave and like its quantum particle, the photon.
Infrared radiation was discovered in 1800 by astronomer Sir William Herschel, who discovered a type of invisible radiation in the spectrum lower in energy than red light, by means of its effect on a thermometer. Slightly more than half of the total energy from the Sun was eventually found to arrive on Earth in the form of infrared. The balance between absorbed and emitted infrared radiation has a critical effect on Earth's climate.
Infrared radiation is emitted or absorbed by molecules when they change their rotational-vibrational movements. It excites vibrational modes in a molecule through a change in the dipole moment, making it a useful frequency range for study of these energy states for molecules of the proper symmetry. Infrared spectroscopy examines absorption and transmission of photons in the infrared range.Infrared radiation is used in industrial, scientific, military, commercial, and medical applications. Night-vision devices using active near-infrared illumination allow people or animals to be observed without the observer being detected. Infrared astronomy uses sensor-equipped telescopes to penetrate dusty regions of space such as molecular clouds, detect objects such as planets, and to view highly red-shifted objects from the early days of the universe. Infrared thermal-imaging cameras are used to detect heat loss in insulated systems, to observe changing blood flow in the skin, and to detect overheating of electrical apparatus.Extensive uses for military and civilian applications include target acquisition, surveillance, night vision, homing, and tracking. Humans at normal body temperature radiate chiefly at wavelengths around 10 μm (micrometers). Non-military uses include thermal efficiency analysis, environmental monitoring, industrial facility inspections, detection of grow-ops, remote temperature sensing, short-range wireless communication, spectroscopy, and weather forecasting.

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