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Night Vision
Night Vision
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Day / Night Systems
Digital Night Vision
Night Vision Monoculars
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HOW NIGHT VISION WORKS
Night Vision Monoculars
,
Night Vision Binoculars
and
Night Vision Scopes
are
electro-optical devices
that intensify (or amplify) existing light instead of relying on a light source of their own. The
night vision devices
are sensitive to a broad spectrum of light, from visible through infrared. An accessory illuminator can increase the light available at the infrared end of the spectrum by casting a beam of light that is not visible to the human eye.
You do not look "through" a
Night Vision
product, you look at the the amplified electronic image on a phosphor screen.
Light enters the
Night Vision
device through an
objective lens
and strikes a
photo cathode
that has a high energy charge from the power supply. The energy charge accelerates across a vacuum inside the
intensifier
and strikes a
phosphor screen
(like a TV screen) where the image is focused. The eyepiece magnifies the image.
A
Night Vision
phosphor screen is purposefully colored green because the human eye can differentiate more shades of green than other phosphor colors.
Like cameras,
Night Vision
products have various image magnifications. The distance at which a human-sized figure can be clearly recognized under normal conditions (moon and star light, with no haze or fog) depends on both the magnifying power of the objective lens and the strength of the image intensifier. The maximum viewing range of the Moonlight product familty is from 200 feet to 800 feet.
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