The ability to see in the dark gives combatants a massive advantage over adversaries who can’t. The United States military is unsurpassed in the night vision technology available to its forces.

Our last article provided a grounding in the basics of night vision. To summarize, there are three night vision technologies: 1) direct infrared illumination, 2) ambient light intensification, and 3) thermal imaging.  Of these, the second, ambient intensification, is the most widely used. When you see operators using binocular NODs clipped to their helmets, those devices are amplifying ambient light. The key word is “ambient.” For those NODs to work, there must be some light for the device to amplify.

While this article is written to be read separately, it would be useful for the reader to review our other article. It can be found here.

Will night vision goggles work in a completely dark room?

In that article, we asked a question: “Will night vision goggles allow you to see in a windowless room in the complete absence of light?”

The short answer is “no.” Night vision goggles use ambient intensification. If the windows are boarded up, and the lights are turned off, there is no light in the room to amplify.

Let’s review what we mean by “light.” Electromagnetic radiation comes in a range of wavelengths called a “spectrum.” Figure 1 reproduces the spectrum we talked about in our first article.

Visible spectrum
Figure 1. Visible Spectrum and Near-IR in Micrometers (Microns)

When we see a red dress, the material of that dress absorbs all the wavelengths from 0.4 to 1.0 micrometers (microns) and reflects only those of, say, 0.65 microns. Our eyes pick up that reflected light, and our brain interprets it as “red.”

Now this is important. If the dress absorbed everything and reflected only the 0.8 wavelength, the dress would look black. Why? The dress absorbed all the wavelengths we can see. Look at Figure 1. We can’t see 0.8 microns.