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Ultraviolet
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=== "Black lights" === {{multiple image | direction = vertical | width = 220 | image1 = Two black light fluorescent tubes.jpg | image2 = Two black light lamps.jpg | footer = Two black light fluorescent tubes, showing use. The longer tube is a F15T8/BLB 18 inch, 15 watt tube, shown in the bottom image in a standard plug-in fluorescent fixture. The shorter is an F8T5/BLB 12 inch, 8 watt tube, used in a portable battery-powered black light sold as a pet urine detector. }} {{Main|Blacklight}} A ''black light'' lamp emits long-wave UVA radiation and little visible light. Fluorescent black light lamps work similarly to other [[fluorescent lamps]], but use a [[phosphor]] on the inner tube surface which emits UVA radiation instead of visible light. Some lamps use a deep-bluish-purple [[Wood's glass]] optical filter that blocks almost all visible light with wavelengths longer than 400 nanometers.<ref> {{cite web |title=Insect-O-Cutor |url=http://www.insect-o-cutor.com/ioclibrary/blacklight.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130604215247/http://www.insect-o-cutor.com/ioclibrary/blacklight.pdf |archive-date=4 June 2013 }} </ref> The purple glow given off by these tubes is not the ultraviolet itself, but visible purple light from mercury's 404 nm spectral line which escapes being filtered out by the coating. Other black lights use plain glass instead of the more expensive Wood's glass, so they appear light-blue to the eye when operating.{{cn|date=May 2024}} Incandescent black lights are also produced, using a filter coating on the envelope of an incandescent bulb that absorbs visible light (''see section below''). These are cheaper but very inefficient, emitting only a small fraction of a percent of their power as UV. [[mercury vapor lamp|Mercury-vapor]] black lights in ratings up to 1 kW with UV-emitting phosphor and an envelope of [[Wood's glass]] are used for theatrical and concert displays.{{cn|date=May 2024}} Black lights are used in applications in which extraneous visible light must be minimized; mainly to observe ''[[fluorescence]]'', the colored glow that many substances give off when exposed to UV light. UVA / [[UV-B lamps|UVB emitting bulbs]] are also sold for other special purposes, such as [[tanning lamp]]s and reptile-husbandry.{{cn|date=May 2024}}
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