ABSTRACT
Infrared (IR) thermal imaging provides an ecient means of recording the surface temperatures of the human body. It is a noncontact radiometric technique that has improved considerably since its early trials in medicine in the late 1950s.1
Infrared (IR) thermal imaging provides an ecient means of recording the surface temperatures of the human body. It is a noncontact radiometric technique that has improved considerably since its early trials in medicine in the late 1950s.1