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Many other light sources, such as fluorescent lamps, or LEDs (light emitting diodes) emit light primarily by processes other than thermal radiation. This means that the emitted radiation does not follow the form of a black-body spectrum. These sources are assigned what is known as a correlated color temperature (CCT). CCT is the color temperature of a black-body radiator which to human color perception most closely matches the light from the lamp. Because such an approximation is not required for incandescent light, the CCT for an incandescent light is simply its unadjusted temperature, derived from comparison to a black-body radiator.
You are reading this on a screen that looks pretty much white, but is near room temperature.How good does the "emulation" need to be?If I put some effort into it I could make a "white LED" that was arbitrarily close to Black body radiation at 5800 K (i.e. as hot as the Sun) across the visible spectrum even though it wasn't much more than warm.But it wouldn't look anything like a black body in the IR or UV (never mind the microwave/ RF, etc)
[Now we can emulate any EM frequency, from radio to gamma ray using relatively cool devices (close to room temperature). Can we combine those devices and adjust their intensities to emulate black body radiation?