bolometric detectors, owing to advancements in MEMS-technologies (Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems) 6,7 , have already entered the consumer electronics market, and are able to record thermal images with both high speed and high resolution. However, their thermographic performance, based on measurements of IR radiation intensity, is inherently limited by the transparency and emissivity/reflectivity of an observed object and, more importantly, by any material and medium (window, coating, matrix, solvent etc.) situated within the path between the detector and an object ( Fig. 1). As one of the major consequences, IR thermography cannot be easily combined with conventional optical microscopy or other enclosed optical systems such as cryostats or microfluidic cells.An alternative method for remote thermography, which is unhindered by enclosures or IRabsorptive media, utilizes temperature sensitive luminophores (i.e. fluorophores or phosphors) with PL in the visible spectral range (Fig. 1c) that are deposited onto, or incorporated into, the object of interest as temperature probes [8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16] . To probe an object's temperature, the luminophore is then excited by an ultraviolet or visible (UV-Vis) pulsed source (e.g. laser or light-emitting diode) and the temperature-dependent PL lifetime decay is then analyzed by time-resolving detectors.This PL-lifetime approach exhibits several benefits: the excitation power and, consequently the PL intensity, can be adjusted to a value appropriate for the dynamic range of the detector.Additionally, the use of UV-Vis light, rather than mid-to long-wavelength IR radiation, allows for the direct integration of this method with conventional optical spectroscopy and microscopy applied in biological studies and materials research. Furthermore, higher spatial resolutions can be obtained with visible light (400-700 nm) as the diffraction-limit is ca. 20-times sharper than for LWIR (7-14 µm); this potentially extends the utility of remote thermography to intracellular, in vitro, and in vivo studies 17 .