Since you struggle so much with reading, I will read it for you:
> UPE, also known as biophoton emission, is a spontaneous release of extremely low-intensity light that is invisible to the human eye and falls within the spectral range of 200–1,000 nm.
UPE is due to oxidative stress. In contrast, the wavelength of IR is 700 nm to 1 mm. IR is fundamentally different altogether than UPE.
_Fundamentally_ different or just slightly below infrared?
Light is all _fundamentally_ the same.
Also, you just conceded that the ranges overlap. 700nm (lower bound for what is considered infrared) is below 1000nm (troll paper upper bound definition).
Many biological processes generate heat, which in turn emit photons.
I stand by my assessment. Troll paper by kids playing with IR cameras, overblown into sensationalist media.
I clearly indicated how a large portion of the range, i.e. from 200 nm to 700 nm doesn't overlap. It is useless discussing things with someone who jumps to using the t word.
The original article title is less spooky sounding.
"Imaging Ultraweak Photon Emission from Living and Dead Mice and from Plants under Stress"
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jpclett.4c03546
Dare I mention the woo-woo word... aura?
[flagged]
Since you struggle so much with reading, I will read it for you:
> UPE, also known as biophoton emission, is a spontaneous release of extremely low-intensity light that is invisible to the human eye and falls within the spectral range of 200–1,000 nm.
UPE is due to oxidative stress. In contrast, the wavelength of IR is 700 nm to 1 mm. IR is fundamentally different altogether than UPE.
_Fundamentally_ different or just slightly below infrared?
Light is all _fundamentally_ the same.
Also, you just conceded that the ranges overlap. 700nm (lower bound for what is considered infrared) is below 1000nm (troll paper upper bound definition).
Many biological processes generate heat, which in turn emit photons.
I stand by my assessment. Troll paper by kids playing with IR cameras, overblown into sensationalist media.
I clearly indicated how a large portion of the range, i.e. from 200 nm to 700 nm doesn't overlap. It is useless discussing things with someone who jumps to using the t word.
If it were clear, there would be no overlap.