There is more to the world than
 meets the human eye, a fact that hit home for the 18th-century
 astronomer Sir Frederick William Herschel when he discovered infrared light—a wavelength of light that lies
 just outside the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. We
 can feel its heat, but we can’t see the light—not without special
 equipment designed to be sensitive in this regime.
It’s somehow fitting that this
 invisible form of radiation is now used by infrared telescopes to
 “see” through interstellar dust in our universe to image distant,
 hidden galaxies, among other celestial objects—not to mention the
 increasingly common use of infrared (IR) photography here on Earth. A
 simple image of a park on a sunny day is transformed in the infrared
 into an eerily surreal landscape, simultaneously familiar and alien.
That’s because many materials
 reflect, absorb, and transmit infrared light differently than they do visible light: Reds and
 greens appear lighter, while blues and browns appear dark. A clear
 sky will appear very dark, except for the occasional white cloud;
 vegetation, like trees, reflects IR and will appear extremely bright
 in an infrared image—unless the tree in question is dead or
 diseased, in which case it reflects less IR and shows up dark. Photograph a person in the
 infrared and the skin will look chalky, eyes will show up as dark
 spots, red lips will be deathly pale, and dark brown hair will appear
 nearly white.
Those contrasts are precisely what
 makes IR photography such a useful tool for tasks like studying plant
 diseases; detecting fiber irregularities in the textile industry; and
 forensic imaging of cloth, fibers, and hair, among other uses.
 Infrared imaging is also a standard laboratory tool for analyzing
 faded, damaged, or altered documents, because the differences between
 pigments, dyes, and inks show up clearly in IR. This makes it easy to
 determine if there is writing underneath a top layer of text, for
example.

That’s where Charles Falco’s
 interest lies,
 and he’s in very good company.  In addition to looking at things in
 the infrared, scientists have also studied paintings, documents and
 other artifacts using synchrotron radiation (and X-rays in general).
 For example, in 2008, European scientists used synchrotron radiation
 to reconstruct the portrait of a peasant woman painted by Vincent van
 Gogh that the artist had then painted over when he created 1887′s
 “Patch of Grass.”
An optics professor at the
 University of Arizona, Falco made headlines in the art world over a
 decade ago through his controversial collaboration with David Hockney on the possible
 use of optical tracing aids by certain Dutch masters, like Jan van
 Eyck. But his interest in photography goes back even further, to his
 childhood in Orange County, California.  He took his first
 photographs when he was just 5 years old.
His mother, a widowed schoolteacher,
 bought him a camera for Christmas when he was 12, and he brought it
 to the Griffith Park Observatory in Los Angeles, among other
 settings. “I took a picture of the moon through the eyepiece
 telescope,” he recalls. In fact, he credits his childhood passion
 with sparking his interest in optics.
It was only a matter of time before
 he discovered infrared photography, and figured out it could be
 useful in analyzing fine art. Because many pigments show up as
 semitransparent in this regime, infrared imaging can reveal details
 in paintings, thereby shedding light on the decisions the artist made
 while creating the final piece.  “If an artist has made markings on
 the canvas and then covers it with blue paint, I can be the first
 person in hundreds of years to see those markings,” he says. “Even
 if they’re trivial marks, every time I see them, it’s
 tremendously exciting.”

Infrared imaging has been used to
 analyze old documents and works of art since the 1960s. But the
 equipment typically used by conservators for this kind of analysis is
 bulky and pricey; the systems can run more than $100,000. Falco has developed a hacked hand-held version
[pdf]—not
 as precise in resolution, but cheaper and more portable, making it
 possible to image paintings right on the walls they adorn.
The first infrared photographs were
 taken in the 19th century, although the practice did not become
 common until the invention of IR films in the early 20th century and
 the concurrent development of special infrared filters. The rise of
 the digital camera removed the need to fuss with chemicals and
 special films. The image sensors used in digital cameras are already
 sensitive to infrared light; in fact, they come equipped with filters
 to remove it. Take out the filter and replace it with another that
 blocks visible light and voila! You’ve got yourself a digital
 infrared camera.
Falco bought a used Canon 30D on
 eBay and converted it into an infrared camera and has used it to
 photograph paintings of interest in museums around the world:
 Washington, DC’s, National Gallery of Art, the State Hermitage
 Museum in St. Petersburg, and Tokyo’s National Museum of Western
 Art, to name a few.  All told, he spent about $2,000. Ideally, he
 takes pictures in both the visible and the infrared, loads them into
 Photoshop, and then toggles back and forth between the two, looking
 for telling differences.
It’s the portability of Falco’s
 device that confers the biggest advantage, since paintings and other
 works of art would otherwise need to be removed and sent to a
 laboratory for this kind of analysis. Even assuming a museum curator
 at the Louvre would grant permission to do so—thereby risking the
 wrath of patrons who may have come just to see that particular
 canvas—it’s still an expensive and time-consuming process, and
 there is no way of foreseeing which paintings would yield interesting
 details from such analysis.
Falco estimates that it would take
 400 years to photograph every painting in the Louvre by sending them
 away. Working five days a week with his machine, he could image them
 all (including those in storage) in just one year. True, the
 resolution wouldn’t be as high, but his hand-held device makes it
 possible to sift through an entire collection and pick out those
 worthy of further analysis.
Falco can also jigger his camera to
photograph ultraviolet light, which can
 reveal otherwise hidden details, most notably fluorescence. Birds,
 bees, and other insects, for example, are sensitive to ultraviolet
 light; bees use it to locate nectar-rich flowers for pollination.
But UV photography is much difficult to do since UV light usually doesn’t pass
 through the glass of the lens. Falco’s solution? Buy a bunch of old
 lenses off eBay and painstakingly test each one with a spectrometer
 to see if any would transmit in the near-ultraviolet regime. Finally,
 he found a lens that for some unknown reason had just the right
 optical properties to allow a little near-UV light through, and he
 used it to build a handheld UV camera. Now he can see what a bird or
 a bee would see when looking at the Mona Lisa in the Louvre.

Jennifer Ouellette is a science
 writer and the author of The Calculus Diaries and the forthcoming Me,
 Myself and Why: Searching for the Science of Self. Follow her on
Twitter @JenLucPiquant.

 
									 
					
