How infrared sensor works? | tutorial #5 | 3D animation 🔥🔥?

An infrared sensor is like a special kind of eye that can see heat, just like how you can feel something warm in your hand.

Imagine you have a toy that lights up when it gets close to another toy. That’s what an infrared sensor does, but instead of light, it uses heat or infrared rays. These are invisible to our eyes, but the sensor can see them like they're glowing.

How It Feels Heat

The sensor has a part that acts like a skin, it feels heat. When something warm, like your hand or another object, comes close, the sensor detects the heat and sends a message saying “Something is here!”

Think of it like a doorbell. When you press the button (like touching the sensor), the bell rings (the sensor reacts). But instead of pressing a button, you're just getting warm near the sensor.

How It Uses Light

Sometimes, an infrared sensor uses a light that we can’t see, called infrared light. This light bounces off objects and comes back to the sensor. Like when you shine a flashlight on a wall and see your shadow, the sensor sees the shadow of heat or light.

So whether it’s feeling heat or seeing invisible light, an infrared sensor works like a clever detective, always looking out for warmth or hidden signals! 🔥An infrared sensor is like a special kind of eye that can see heat, just like how you can feel something warm in your hand.

Imagine you have a toy that lights up when it gets close to another toy. That’s what an infrared sensor does, but instead of light, it uses heat or infrared rays. These are invisible to our eyes, but the sensor can see them like they're glowing.

How It Feels Heat

The sensor has a part that acts like a skin, it feels heat. When something warm, like your hand or another object, comes close, the sensor detects the heat and sends a message saying “Something is here!”

Think of it like a doorbell. When you press the button (like touching the sensor), the bell rings (the sensor reacts). But instead of pressing a button, you're just getting warm near the sensor.

How It Uses Light

Sometimes, an infrared sensor uses a light that we can’t see, called infrared light. This light bounces off objects and comes back to the sensor. Like when you shine a flashlight on a wall and see your shadow, the sensor sees the shadow of heat or light.

So whether it’s feeling heat or seeing invisible light, an infrared sensor works like a clever detective, always looking out for warmth or hidden signals! 🔥

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Examples

  1. A dog barking at a motion sensor in the middle of the night
  2. A toaster sensing when your bread is done
  3. A burglar alarm triggered by someone walking past it

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