Although methane is one of the most potent of the greenhouses gases, scientists still aren't entirely clear on all of its ground-based sources. That's why researchers from Sweden's Linköping and Stockholm universities have created a camera that's capable of imaging methane in real time. They say that it could find use in monitoring sources such as sludge deposits, combustion processes, farms and lakes.
The present prototype tips the scales at 35 kg (77 lb), and shoots both stills and video of methane. It's a hyperspectral camera, which means that it can "see" light spectra not visible to the human eye. In its case, it's tuned to image the specific type of infrared radiation that methane is known for absorbing.
While it's not the first methane-detecting camera ever made, the scientists state that it's much more sensitive than anything that has come before. This should make it ideal for detecting the gas even in relatively small amounts.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 03 2015, @10:11AM
There's a well-known documentary (in two parts so far) by that name about the immediate local effects of shale gas exploitation on living and wildlife.
I don't recall for sure right now, but probably in the second movie, one of the local residents uses a FLIR camera to document gaseous emissions of gas wells and related storage facilities. That shit is leaky as a sieve, according to the narrator it's mostly methane escaping. Worth watching.